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Forex Money Management
By FX Master
Money management is a critical point that shows difference between
winners and losers. It was proved that if 100 traders start trading
using a system with 60% winning odds, only 5 traders will be in
profit at the end of the year. In spite of the 60% winning odds
95% of traders will lose because of their poor money management.
Money management is the most significant part of any trading system.
Most of traders don't understand how important it is.
It's important to understand the concept of money
management and understand the difference between it and trading
decisions. Money management represents the amount of money you are
going to put on one trade and the risk your going to accept for
this trade.
There are different money management strategies.
They all aim at preserving your balance from high risk exposure.
First of all, you should understand the following
term Core equity
Core equity = Starting balance - Amount in open positions.
If you have a balance of 10,000$ and you enter a
trade with 1,000$ then your core equity is 9,000$. If you enter
another 1,000$ trade,your core equity will be 8,000$
It's important to understand what's meant by core
equity since your money management will depend on this equity.
We will explain here one model of money management
that has proved high anual return and limited risk. The standard
account that we will be discussing is 100,000$ account with 20:1
leverage . Anyway,you can adapt this strategy to fit smaller or
bigger trading accounts.
Money management strategy
Your risk per a trade should never exceed 3% per
trade. It's better to adjust your risk to 1% or 2%
We prefer a risk of 1% but if you are confident in your trading
system then you can lever your risk up to 3%
1% risk of a 100,000$ account = 1,000$
You should adjust your stop loss so that you never
lose more than 1,000$ per a single trade.
If you are a short term trader and you place your
stop loss 50 pips below/above your entry point .
50 pips = 1,000$
1 pips = 20$
The size of your trade should be adjusted so that
you risk 20$/pip. With 20:1 leverage,your trade size will be 200,000$
If the trade is stopped, you will lose 1,000$ which
is 1% of your balance.
This trade will require 10,000$ = 10% of your balance.
If you are a long term trader and you place your
stop loss 200 pips below/above your entry point.
200 pips = 1,000$
1 pip = 5$
The size of your trade should be adjusted so that
you risk 5$/pip. With 20:1 leverage, your trade size will be 50,000$
If the trade is stopped, you will lose 1,000$ which
is 1% of your balance.
This trade will require 2,500$ = 2.5% of your balance.
This's just an example. Your trading balance and
leverage provided by your broker may differ from this formula. The
most important is to stick to the 1% risk rule. Never risk too much
in one trade. It's a fatal mistake when a trader lose 2 or 3 trades
in a row, then he will be confident that his next trade will be
winning and he may add more money to this trade. This's how you
can blow up your account in a short time! A disciplined trader should
never let his emotions and greed control his decisions.
Diversification
Trading one currnecy pair will generate few entry
signals. It would be better to diversify your trades between several
currencies. If you have 100,000$ balance and you have open position
with 10,000$ then your core equity is 90,000$. If you want to enter
a second position then you should calculate 1% risk of your core
equity not of your starting balance!. Itmeans that the second trade
risk should never be more than 900$. If you want to enter a 3rd
position and your core equity is 80,000$ then the risk per 3rd trade
should not exceed 800$
It's important that you diversify your prders between
currencies that have low correlation.
For example, If you have long EUR/USD then you shouldn't
long GBP/USD since they have high correlation. If you have long
EUR/USD and GBP/USD positions and risking 3% per trade then your
risk is 6% since the trades will tend to end in same direction.
If you want to trade both EUR/USD and GBP/USD and
your standard position size from your money management is 10,000$
(1% risk rule) then you can trade 5,000$ EUR/USD and 5,000$ GBP/USD.
In this way,you will be risking 0.5% on each position.
The Martingale and anti-martingale strategy
It's very important to understand these 2 strategies.
-Martingale rule = increasing your risk when losing
!
This's a startegy adopted by gamblers which claims
that you should increase the size of you trades when losing. It's
applied in gambling in the following way Bet 10$,if you lose bet
20$,if you lose bet 40$,if you lose bet 80$,if you lose bet 160$..etc
This strategy assumes that after 4 or 5 losing trades,your
chance to win is bigger so you should add more money to recover
your loss! The truth is that the odds are same in spite of your
previous loss! If you have 5 losses in a row ,still your odds for
6th bet 50:50! The same fatal mistake can be made by some novice
traders. For example,if a trader started with a abalance of 10,000$
and after 4 losing trades (each is 1,000$) his balance is 6000$.
The trader will think that he has higher chances of winning the
5th trade then he will increase ths size of his position 4 times
to recover his loss. If he lose,his balance will be 2,000$!! He
will never recover from 2,000$ to his startiing balance 10,000$.
A disciplined trader should never use such gambling method unless
he wants to lose his money in a short time.
-Anti-martingale rule = increase your risk when
winning& decrease your risk when losing
It means that the trader should adjust the size
of his positions according to his new gains or losses.
Example: Trader A starts with a balance of 10,000$. His standard
trade size is 1,000$
After 6 months,his balance is 15,000$. He should adjust his trade
size to 1,500$
Trader B starts with 10,000$.His standard trade
size is 1,000$
After 6 months his balance is 8,000$. He should adjust his trade
size to 800$
High return strategy
This strategy is for traders looking for higher
return and still preserving their starting balance.
According to your money management rules,you should
be risking 1% of you balance. If you start with 10,000$ and your
trade size is 1,000$ (Risk 1%) After 1 year,your balance is 15,000$.
Now you have your initial balance + 5,000$ profit. You can increase
your potential profit by risking more from this profit while restricting
your initial balance risk to 1%. For example,you can calcualte your
trade in the following pattern:
1% risk 10,000$ (initial balance)+ 5% of 5,000$
(profit)
In this way,you will have more potential for higher
returns and on the same time you are still risking 1% of your initial
deposit.
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risk. This course and the website www.fxmaster.net and its contents
is neither a solicitation nor an offer to Buy/Sell any financial
market. The contents of this course are for general information
purposes only. The information provided in this course is not intended
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