Calculating Risk Per Trade

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Calculating Risk Per Trade
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Definition

Risk per trade, often expressed as a percentage of total Trading Capital or Account Equity, is the maximum amount of capital a trader is willing to lose on a single market transaction. It represents the downside exposure accepted for any given trade setup. Calculating and adhering to a strict risk per trade is a fundamental component of sound Risk Management strategy in Futures Trading.

Why it matters

Determining the risk per trade before entering a position is crucial for long-term sustainability in the markets. It directly influences the Drawdown potential of a trading account. By setting a fixed, small percentage risk (e.g., 1% or 2%), a trader ensures that a string of consecutive losses, which is inevitable in any trading strategy, does not wipe out the entire account. This disciplined approach allows the trader to remain in the market long enough to realize the statistical edge of their Trading Strategy.

How it works

The calculation involves three primary components: the total capital available, the chosen risk percentage, and the defined Stop Loss level.

The formula to determine the maximum allowable position size based on risk per trade is:

Maximum Position Size (in contract units) = (Account Equity * Risk Percentage) / (Entry Price - Stop Loss Price)

Where:

  • Account Equity is the current balance of the trading account.
  • Risk Percentage is the maximum percentage the trader is willing to lose (e.g., 0.01 for 1%).
  • Entry Price is the price at which the trade is initiated.
  • Stop Loss Price is the price at which the trade will be automatically closed to limit losses.

The difference between the Entry Price and the Stop Loss Price represents the dollar risk per contract unit.

Practical examples

Consider a trader with $50,000 in their account who decides to risk 1% per trade ($500). They plan to trade ES futures.

  • Determine Dollar Risk: $50,000 * 0.01 = $500.
  • Determine Risk per Contract: If the trader enters a long position at 4,500.00 and sets their stop loss at 4,490.00, the risk per point is $50.00 (since one ES point is $50.00). The dollar risk per contract is ($4,500.00 - $4,490.00) * $50.00/point = $10.00 * $50.00 = $500.00.
  • Calculate Position Size: In this specific scenario, the maximum position size is 1 contract ($500 risk / $500 risk per contract).

If the stop loss was tighter, say at 4,495.00 (risk of $250 per contract), the trader could take a position size of 2 contracts ($500 risk / $250 risk per contract).

Common mistakes

A frequent error is calculating risk based on the desired Position Sizing rather than basing the position size on a fixed risk percentage relative to the stop loss distance. Traders might decide they want to buy 5 contracts first, and then attempt to calculate a stop loss that fits their perceived risk, which often leads to overleveraging. Another mistake is failing to recalculate the risk per trade when the Account Equity changes significantly due to profits or losses. Furthermore, ignoring Slippage when setting the initial stop loss can lead to actual losses exceeding the intended risk per trade.

Safety and Risk Notes

The chosen risk percentage must be conservative. While some aggressive traders may risk 5% per trade, this exposes the account to rapid depletion if the strategy experiences a normal losing streak. Most professional traders recommend keeping risk between 0.5% and 2.0% per trade. This calculation does not account for margin requirements, which are separate considerations for Leverage management. Proper risk calculation is the primary defense against catastrophic loss.

See also

Stop Loss Take Profit Position Sizing Leverage Trading Capital Drawdown Risk Management

References

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