Why Position Sizing Matters
Position sizing is the single most important risk management tool in trading. It determines how much of your account you risk on each trade, and it's the difference between surviving a losing streak and blowing up.
Here's a shocking fact: If you risk 10% of your account per trade, just 10 consecutive losses will wipe out 65% of your account. With 2% risk, 10 losses only cost you 18%. With 1%, just 10%.
Position sizing isn't about how much you make on winners — it's about how much you lose on losers. And since losses are inevitable, position sizing is the only thing you can control.
📐 "Position sizing is the only part of trading you have complete control over. You can't control the market, but you can control how much you risk."
Fixed Percentage Method
Best for: Beginners and most retail traders
You risk a fixed percentage of your account on every trade. The standard is 1% per trade.
How it works:
- Account size: $10,000
- Risk per trade: 1% = $100
- Stop loss distance: $2 per share
- Position size: $100 / $2 = 50 shares
Pros: Simple, consistent, scales with your account, prevents blowing up
Cons: Doesn't account for win rate or volatility
The Kelly Criterion
Best for: Advanced traders with a known edge
The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula that tells you the optimal position size to maximize long-term growth. It was developed by John Kelly in 1956 for gambling, but it applies directly to trading.
The formula: Kelly % = Win Rate - (Loss Rate / Win/Loss Ratio)
Example: 60% win rate, 1:2 risk/reward:
Kelly % = 0.60 - (0.40 / 2) = 0.60 - 0.20 = 0.40 (40%)
Important: Full Kelly is too aggressive for most traders. Most professionals use Fractional Kelly (25-50% of the Kelly value) to reduce volatility.
Pros: Maximizes long-term growth mathematically
Cons: Very sensitive to estimation errors, can suggest huge position sizes, can lead to massive drawdowns
Volatility-Based Sizing (ATR)
Best for: Volatile markets (crypto, earnings plays)
Instead of sizing based on a fixed dollar risk, you size based on the asset's volatility using the Average True Range (ATR) indicator.
How it works:
- Account risk per trade: $100
- ATR of AAPL: $3.50
- Stop loss: 1.5× ATR = $5.25
- Position size: $100 / $5.25 = 19 shares
Pros: Adapts to market conditions, smaller positions in volatile markets, larger in calm markets
Cons: Requires ATR calculation, can lead to very small positions in highly volatile assets
Comparing the Methods
- Fixed %: Simple, safe. Best for new traders.
- Kelly Criterion: Theoretically optimal, but aggressive. Best for experienced traders with a proven edge.
- Volatility-based: Adaptable. Best for traders who trade multiple assets with different volatility profiles.
We recommend starting with the Fixed Percentage (1%) method and exploring others as you gain experience.
The Universal Position Size Formula
No matter which method you use, the core formula is the same:
Position Size = Account Risk $ / (Entry Price - Stop Loss Price)
For stocks: Shares = Risk $ / Per-Share Risk
For forex: Lot Size = Risk $ / (Stop Loss in Pips × Pip Value)
For crypto: Coin Amount = Risk $ / (Entry - Stop Price)
Common Position Sizing Mistakes
- Increasing size after wins: Overconfidence bias. Stick to your system.
- Decreasing size after losses: Fear bias. If your edge is still valid, stick with it.
- Ignoring correlation: Multiple positions in correlated assets is concentrated risk.
- Not adjusting for volatility: A 1% risk on a calm AAPL is different from 1% on a volatile BTC.
- Trading too many positions: Your total portfolio risk should be capped (e.g., 5% max total exposure).
Tracking Position Size in Your Journal
Your trading journal should track position sizing automatically. Essential fields:
- Risk amount ($): The dollar amount at risk
- Risk %: Percentage of account risked
- Position size: Number of shares/contracts/units
- R-multiple: How many units of risk did you gain or lose?
Our Notion Trading Journal Template includes automatic position size calculations, R-multiple tracking, and risk management dashboards. Never guess your position size again.
Master Your Position Sizing
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