Academy โ€บ Risk Management โ€บ Position Sizing
4

The 1% and 2% Rule

Risk Management Intermediate โฑ 5 min read
Risk Management
Why Risk Management Matters Why Risk Management is Everything
Portfolio Management Portfolio Management
๐Ÿ“ Take Subject Test
๐Ÿ“š Subject Overview
Risk Management
9 topics ยท 4 chapters
Protect your capital โ€” risk management is everything.
๐ŸŽ“ Back to Academy
๐Ÿ‘‹ Welcome, Trader!
Login to track your progress
๐Ÿ”‘ Login ๐Ÿ“ Register Free
Academy Progress
0/6 Passed
0%
๐Ÿ“Š Register to save your progress
๐ŸŒ TradeSmart Community
Share your analysis. Learn from others.
๐Ÿ”‘ Login / Register โœ๏ธ Write a Blog

The Rule That Keeps You Alive

Every professional trader has a maximum risk per trade rule.

It varies slightly between traders โ€” but the most common and most recommended for retail traders is:

Never risk more than 1-2% of your total account on any single trade.

This single rule โ€” applied consistently โ€” is the difference between surviving and blowing up.

What Does 1% Risk Mean?

1% risk does NOT mean investing 1% of your account.

It means the maximum you can LOSE on the trade is 1% of your account.

Example:
Account size: $10,000
1% risk = $100 maximum loss per trade.

If your stop loss is hit โ€” you lose $100. Not $10,000. Not $5,000. $100.

This $100 is your defined risk. Your position size is calculated to ensure this.

Why This Rule Works โ€” The Math

10 consecutive losing trades at 2% risk:

Starting account: $10,000

After 10 losses:
$10,000 ร— (0.98)^10 = $8,171

You still have 82% of your account after 10 straight losses.

10 consecutive losing trades at 10% risk:

$10,000 ร— (0.90)^10 = $3,487

You have lost 65% of your account after the same 10 losses.

10 consecutive losing trades at 25% risk:

$10,000 ร— (0.75)^10 = $563

You have lost 94% of your account. Game over.

The 1-2% rule is not about being conservative. It is about mathematical survival through inevitable losing streaks.

Every Strategy Has Losing Streaks

No strategy wins 100% of the time. Even the best strategies in the world have losing streaks.

A strategy with 60% win rate:
Statistically โ€” a 10 loss streak will occur eventually.
At 2% risk โ€” 10 losses = account down 18%. Recoverable.
At 10% risk โ€” 10 losses = account down 65%. Devastating.

Losing streaks are not a sign that your strategy is broken. They are mathematical certainties that happen to every trader eventually.

The 1-2% rule ensures you survive the inevitable losing streaks to reach the profitable stretches.

How to Apply the Rule

Step 1: Decide your risk percentage. Start with 1% if new. Maximum 2%.

Step 2: Calculate your risk in dollars.
Account = $5,000. Risk = 1%. Dollar risk = $50.

Step 3: Determine your stop loss distance.
Entry price: $80,000. Stop loss: $78,000. Distance = $2,000.

Step 4: Calculate position size.
Position size = Dollar risk รท Stop loss distance
= $50 รท $2,000 = 0.025 Bitcoin

Step 5: Verify.
0.025 BTC ร— $2,000 stop distance = $50 loss if stopped out. โœ…

Adjusting Risk Based on Conditions

High confidence setup:
Perfect confluence โ€” support, RSI divergence, engulfing pattern, volume confirmation.
Still maximum 2%. Never exceed your rule regardless of confidence.

Lower confidence setup:
Reduce to 0.5% or 1%.
Confidence does not justify breaking risk rules.

After losing streak:
Reduce risk temporarily. Trade at 0.5% until confidence rebuilds.
Never increase risk to recover losses โ€” this leads to account destruction.

After winning streak:
Keep risk at same percentage. Do not increase because of recent wins.
Overconfidence after wins destroys more accounts than losing streaks.

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1 โ€” Confusing investment size with risk
“I only put 2% of my account into this trade” is meaningless without a stop loss.
Without a stop โ€” your entire 2% investment can go to zero.
Risk is defined by your stop loss โ€” not your position size.

Mistake 2 โ€” Moving stop losses
You calculate 1% risk with stop at $78,000.
Trade goes against you. You move stop to $75,000 to give it more room.
Now you are risking 2-3% โ€” breaking your rule.
Never move stop losses further away from entry.

Mistake 3 โ€” Not accounting for fees
Trading fees reduce your actual return.
Factor fees into your risk calculation.

Mistake 4 โ€” Inconsistency
Following the rule on most trades but risking 10% on a few special setups.
The account blowup always comes from those exceptions.

Scaling Up Safely

As your account grows โ€” your dollar risk grows automatically with the percentage.

$10,000 account at 1%: Risk $100 per trade.
$20,000 account at 1%: Risk $200 per trade.
$50,000 account at 1%: Risk $500 per trade.

The percentage stays constant. The dollar amount grows with your success.

This is the correct way to scale โ€” not by increasing the percentage.

In the next topic we will learn how to calculate exact position sizes for any trade setup.

Certificate preview
Certificate of Completion
Risk Management
This certifies that
Your Name
Subject progress 0/9 topics
Complete all topics to earn your certificate
Scroll to Top