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Lesson 7 of 8

Risk Management & Trading Psychology

Risk management is arguably the most important skill in trading. Without it, even the best strategy will fail. In this lesson, you'll learn how to protect your capital and master the psychological aspects of trading.

Why Risk Management Matters

Many traders focus on finding the perfect entry, but surviving long enough to profit is more important. Consider this: if you lose 50% of your capital, you need to gain 100% just to break even.

Loss Gain Needed to Recover
10% 11%
25% 33%
50% 100%
75% 300%
90% 900%
โš ๏ธ The Math of Ruin

A 50% loss requires a 100% gain to recover. This is why protecting capital is more important than maximizing gains. Small, consistent losses are manageable. Large losses can end your trading career.

Position Sizing

Position sizing determines how much capital to allocate to each trade. This is the most powerful risk management tool.

The 1-2% Rule

Never risk more than 1-2% of your total capital on a single trade. This means if your stop-loss is hit, you lose only 1-2% of your portfolio.

๐Ÿ’ก Position Size Calculation

Example:
Account: $10,000
Risk per trade: 1% = $100
Entry: $50,000 (BTC)
Stop-loss: $49,000 (2% below entry)

Risk per coin: $50,000 - $49,000 = $1,000
Position size: $100 รท $1,000 = 0.1 BTC
Position value: 0.1 ร— $50,000 = $5,000

Position Size Formula

Position Size = (Account ร— Risk %) รท (Entry - Stop Loss)

This ensures your loss is capped regardless of how wide your stop is.

Stop-Loss Strategies

A stop-loss is a predetermined exit point if the trade goes against you. Always know your stop before entering a trade.

Types of Stop-Losses

Fixed Stop
Set percentage below entry (e.g., always 3% below). Simple but doesn't consider market structure.
Technical Stop
Placed below support levels, trendlines, or moving averages. Adapts to market structure.
Volatility Stop
Based on ATR (Average True Range). Wider in volatile markets, tighter in calm markets.
Trailing Stop
Moves with price to lock in profits. Exits when price retraces by set amount.

Stop-Loss Best Practices

  • Place stops at levels where your thesis is invalidated
  • Don't place stops at obvious round numbers (easily hunted)
  • Give trades room to breathe - too tight = stopped out on noise
  • Never move stops further away - that's adding to a loser
  • Use mental stops only if you have extreme discipline

Risk-Reward Ratio

The risk-reward ratio (R:R) compares potential profit to potential loss. A good R:R means you can be wrong more often than right and still profit.

Calculating Risk-Reward

R:R = (Target - Entry) รท (Entry - Stop Loss)

๐Ÿ’ก Example

Entry: $50,000
Stop Loss: $48,000 (Risk: $2,000)
Target: $56,000 (Reward: $6,000)

R:R = $6,000 รท $2,000 = 3:1

With 3:1 R:R, you only need to win 25% of trades to break even!

Risk:Reward Win Rate Needed to Break Even
1:1 50%
1:2 33%
1:3 25%
1:5 17%

Most professional traders aim for minimum 2:1 R:R. This gives room for error while remaining profitable over time.

Portfolio Risk Management

Beyond individual trades, manage risk across your entire portfolio.

Key Rules

  • Maximum portfolio risk: Never risk more than 5-6% of total portfolio at once
  • Correlation awareness: Multiple crypto trades are often correlated - if BTC drops, most alts drop
  • Diversification: Don't put everything in one coin or one sector
  • Cash is a position: Being in cash during uncertain times is valid
  • Scale positions: Start small, add to winners, not losers
โš ๏ธ Correlated Risk

If you have 5 altcoin positions at 2% risk each, your actual risk might be 10% because they all correlate with Bitcoin. When BTC drops, they all drop.

Trading Psychology

Your mindset is as important as your strategy. Most trading failures are psychological, not analytical.

Common Psychological Pitfalls

FOMO (Fear of Missing Out)
Chasing pumps, entering late without analysis. Usually results in buying tops.
Revenge Trading
Trying to immediately recover losses by taking bigger, riskier trades.
Overconfidence
After wins, taking larger positions or ignoring rules. "I can't lose."
Loss Aversion
Holding losers too long hoping they recover, cutting winners too early.
Confirmation Bias
Only seeking information that supports your position, ignoring warning signs.
Analysis Paralysis
Over-analyzing to the point of never taking action or missing opportunities.

Building Mental Discipline

Successful trading requires emotional control. Here's how to build it:

1. Create a Trading Plan

Define your rules BEFORE you trade:

  • What setups you trade
  • Entry and exit criteria
  • Position sizing rules
  • Maximum daily/weekly loss limits
  • When to take breaks

2. Keep a Trading Journal

Record every trade with:

  • Entry/exit prices and reasoning
  • What you were thinking/feeling
  • What went right/wrong
  • Screenshots of the setup
  • Lessons learned

3. Accept Losses as Part of Trading

No strategy wins 100% of the time. Losing trades are not failures - they're part of the business. Focus on execution, not individual outcomes.

4. Take Breaks

  • Step away after big wins (overconfidence risk)
  • Step away after big losses (revenge trading risk)
  • Don't trade when tired, emotional, or distracted
  • Crypto runs 24/7 - you don't have to
โœ“ The Professional Mindset

Think in probabilities, not certainties. Your edge plays out over many trades, not one. Execute your plan consistently. Review and improve. Treat trading as a business, not gambling.

๐Ÿง  Test Your Knowledge

1. According to the 1-2% rule, with a $10,000 account, how much should you risk per trade?

$500-$1,000
$10-$20
$100-$200
$1,000-$2,000

2. With a 3:1 risk-reward ratio, what win rate do you need to break even?

50%
25%
75%
33%

3. What is revenge trading?

Taking bigger risks to recover losses quickly
Trading against someone who wronged you
Shorting a coin that made you lose money
A type of stop-loss order

๐Ÿ“‹ Lesson Summary

  • Protecting capital is more important than maximizing gains - losses compound
  • Never risk more than 1-2% of your capital on a single trade
  • Position size = (Account ร— Risk %) รท (Entry - Stop Loss)
  • Aim for minimum 2:1 risk-reward ratio on every trade
  • Manage portfolio-level risk, especially correlated positions
  • Common psychological pitfalls: FOMO, revenge trading, overconfidence, loss aversion
  • Build discipline through trading plans, journals, and accepting losses as part of the game