Trading Fundamentals

    Risk Management for Evaluations

    Practical principles for managing trading risk, including position sizing, stop-loss orders, leverage awareness, and discipline.

    Why Risk Management Matters

    Risk management is an important part of trading. Markets are uncertain, and even well-researched trades can move against you. The goal of risk management is not to eliminate losses, but to define potential loss in advance and reduce the impact that any single trade, or short series of trades, may have on your account.

    Position Sizing

    Position sizing determines how much of the simulated account balance is exposed to a single trade. Some participants use a fixed percentage of account equity to help define risk per position, such as 1โ€“2%, though the appropriate amount depends on account size, market conditions, and individual risk tolerance. Smaller position sizes can help reduce the impact of individual losing trades.

    Stop-Loss Orders

    A stop-loss order is designed to close a position once the market reaches a predefined price level. It can help define an exit level in advance, but it does not guarantee a maximum loss. Execution is not guaranteed at the exact stop price during fast-moving or low-liquidity market conditions, and slippage may occur.

    Take-Profit and Risk-to-Reward

    A take-profit order is designed to close a position once a target level is reached. When used with a stop-loss order, it can help define planned exit levels before entering a trade. Some participants compare the potential loss and potential gain of a setup using a risk-to-reward ratio, but this does not guarantee the outcome of any trade or strategy.

    Leverage Awareness

    Leverage allows participants to control a position larger than the capital required to open it, but it can also amplify both gains and losses. Higher leverage increases market exposure and may lead to rapid losses if the market moves against the position. Participants should understand margin requirements and the effect of leverage before opening leveraged trades.

    Diversification and Correlation

    Holding several positions in highly correlated instruments can increase exposure to similar market movements. Understanding correlation, for example, between major currency pairs or commodity-linked currencies, can help participants assess whether multiple positions are adding similar risks to the account.

    Emotional Discipline

    Emotional decision-making can affect how participants enter, exit, and manage positions. Using predefined entry, exit, and risk rules, along with a trading journal, can help participants review decisions and identify patterns in their behaviour over time.

    Start Your Evaluation

    Select your evaluation account to apply these concepts in a simulated evaluation program built around discipline, consistency, and risk management.