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Understanding Forex Risk Management

<p>Tsuji / Getty Images</p>

Tsuji / Getty Images

Reviewed by Akhilesh GantiReviewed by Akhilesh Ganti

Trading is the exchange of goods or services between two or more parties. So if you need gasoline for your car, then you would trade your dollars for gasoline. In the old days, and still, in some societies, trading was done by barter, where one commodity was swapped for another.

A trade may have gone like this: Person A will fix Person B’s broken window in exchange for a basket of apples from Person B’s tree. This is a practical, easy-to-manage, day-to-day example of making a trade, with relatively easy management of risk.

In order to lessen the risk, Person A might ask Person B to show their apples, to make sure they are good to eat, before fixing the window. This is how trading has been for millennia: a practical, thoughtful human process.

Key Takeaways

  • The forex market is among the most active and liquid in the world, with trillions of dollars changing hands between different currencies.
  • Still, there are many risks that a trader must be aware of and how to minimize or mitigate those risks.
  • Because forex trading operates with a relatively high degree of leverage, the potential risks are magnified compared to other markets.

This Is Now

Now enter the Internet and all of a sudden risk can become completely out of control, in part due to the speed at which a transaction can take place.

In fact, the speed of the transaction, the instant gratification, and the adrenaline rush of making a profit in less than 60 seconds can often trigger a gambling instinct, to which many traders may succumb.

Hence, they might turn to online trading as a form of gambling rather than approaching trading as a professional business that requires proper speculative habits.

Speculating as a trader is not gambling. The difference between gambling and speculating is risk management. In other words, with speculating, you have some kind of control over your risk, whereas with gambling you don’t.

Even a card game such as poker can be played with either the mindset of a gambler or with the mindset of a speculator, usually with totally different outcomes.

Betting Strategies

There are three basic ways to make a bet: Martingale, anti-Martingale, or speculative. “Speculation” comes from the Latin word speculare, meaning to spy out or look forward.

In a Martingale strategy, you would double-up your bet each time you lose and hope that eventually the losing streak will end and you will make a favorable bet, thereby recovering all your losses and even making a small profit.

Using an anti-Martingale strategy, you would halve your bets each time you lost, but you would double your bets each time you won. This theory assumes that you can capitalize on a winning streak and profit accordingly.

Clearly, for online traders, this is the better of the two strategies to adopt. It is always less risky to take your losses quickly and add or increase your trade size when you are winning. However, no trade should be taken without first stacking the odds in your favor, and if this is not clearly possible then no trade should be taken at all.

Know the Odds

So, the first rule in risk management is to calculate the odds of your trade being successful. To do that, you need to grasp both fundamental and technical analysis. You will need to understand the dynamics of the market in which you are trading and also know where the likely psychological price trigger points are, which a price chart can help you decide.

Once a decision is made to take the trade then the next most important factor is in how you control or manage the risk. Remember, if you can measure the risk, you can, for the most part, manage it.

In stacking the odds in your favor, it is important to draw a line in the sand, which will be your cut-out point if the market trades to that level. The difference between this cut-out point and where you enter the market is your risk.

Psychologically, you must accept this risk upfront before you even take the trade. If you can accept the potential loss, and you are OK with it, then you can consider the trade further. If the loss is too much for you to bear, then you must not take the trade, or else you will be severely stressed and unable to be objective as your trade proceeds.

Since risk is the opposite side of the coin to reward, you should draw a second line in the sand, which is where, if the market trades to that point, you will move your original cut-out line to secure your position. This is known as sliding your stops.

This second line is the price at which you break even if the market cuts you out at that point. Once you are protected by a break-even stop, your risk has virtually been reduced to zero, as long as the market is very liquid and you know your trade will be executed at that price. Make sure you understand the difference between stop orders, limit orders, and market orders.

Note

The forex market is the largest financial market in the world by trading volume.

Liquidity

The next risk factor to study is liquidity. Liquidity means that there are a sufficient number of buyers and sellers at current prices to easily and efficiently take your trade. In the case of the forex markets, liquidity, at least in the major currencies, is never a problem.

This is known as market liquidity, and in the forex market, it accounts for some $7.5 trillion per day in trading volume as of April 2022 (latest information).

However, this liquidity is not necessarily available to all brokers and is not the same in all currency pairs. It is really the broker liquidity that will affect you as a trader. Unless you trade directly with a large forex dealing bank, you most likely will need to rely on an online broker to hold your account and execute your trades accordingly.

Questions relating to broker risk are beyond the scope of this article, but large, well-known, and well-capitalized brokers should be fine for most retail online traders, at least in terms of having sufficient liquidity to effectively execute your trade.

Risk Per Trade

Another aspect of risk is determined by how much trading capital you have available. Risk per trade should always be a small percentage of your total capital. A good starting percentage could be 2% of your available trading capital.

So, for example, if you have $5,000 in your account, the maximum loss allowable should be no more than 2%. With these parameters, your maximum loss would be $100 per trade. A 2% loss per trade would mean you can be wrong 50 times in a row before you wipe out your account. This is an unlikely scenario if you have a proper system for stacking the odds in your favor.

So, how do we actually measure the risk?

The way to measure risk per trade is by using your price chart. This is best demonstrated by looking at a chart as follows:

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020 EUR/USD One-Hour Time Frame
Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020 EUR/USD One-Hour Time Frame

We have already determined that our first line in the sand (stop loss) should be drawn where we would cut out of the position if the market traded to this level. The line is set at 1.3534. To give the market a little room, you can set the stop loss to 1.3530.

A good place to enter the position would be at 1.3580, which, in this example, is just above the high of the hourly close after an attempt to form a triple bottom failed. The difference between this entry point and the exit point is therefore 50 pips. If you are trading with $5,000 in your account, you would limit your loss to 2% of your trading capital, which is $100.

Let’s assume you are trading mini lots. If one pip in a mini lot is equal to approximately $1 and your risk is 50 pips then, for each lot you trade, you are risking $50. You could trade one or two mini lots and keep your risk between $50 and $100. You should not trade more than three mini lots in this example if you do not wish to violate your 2% rule.

Leverage

The next big risk magnifier is leverage. Leverage is the use of the bank’s or broker’s money rather than the strict use of your own. The spot forex market is a very leveraged market, in that you could put down a deposit of just $1,000 to actually trade $100,000.

This is a 100:1 leverage factor. A one pip loss in a 100:1 leveraged situation is equal to $10. So if you had 10 mini lots in the trade, and you lost 50 pips, your loss would be $500, not $50.

However, one of the big benefits of trading the spot forex markets is the availability of high leverage. This high leverage is available because the market is so liquid that it is easy to cut out of a position very quickly and, therefore, easier compared with most other markets to manage leveraged positions.

Leverage of course cuts two ways. If you are leveraged and you make a profit, your returns are magnified very quickly but, in the converse, losses will erode your account just as quickly too.

But of all the risks inherent in a trade, the hardest risk to manage, and by far the most common risk blamed for trader loss, is the bad habit patterns of the trader themself.

All traders have to take responsibility for their own decisions. In trading, losses are part of the norm, so a trader must learn to accept losses as part of the process. Losses are not failures. However, not taking a loss quickly is a failure of proper trade management.

Usually, a trader, when their position moves into a loss, will second guess their system and wait for the loss to turn around and for the position to become profitable. This is fine for those occasions when the market does turn around, but it can be a disaster when the loss gets worse.

The solution to trader risk is to work on your own habits and to be honest enough to acknowledge the times when your ego gets in the way of making the right decisions or when you simply can’t manage the instinctive pull of a bad habit.

The best way to objectify your trading is by keeping a journal of each trade, noting the reasons for entry and exit, and keeping a score of how effective your system is. In other words, how confident are you that your system provides a reliable method in stacking the odds in your favor and thus provides you with more profitable trade opportunities than potential losses?

What Is the Best Risk Management Strategy for Forex?

One of the best risk management strategies for forex is implementing stop-loss orders. Stop-loss orders help traders define their comfort zone, limiting their maximum loss. This removes doubt and emotion from the trading as well as larger losses.

What Are the Biggest Risks in Forex Trading?

Two of the biggest risks in forex trading are volatility and leverage. The larger the volatility, the greater the price swings. While price swings can be beneficial and a way to turn profits, they can also lead to large losses. Leverage is another big risk in forex trading. Using leverage, which means trading on margin, allows the purchase of assets at a fraction of the actual cost. This allows traders to trade with less money but it amplifies the losses.

What Is FX Risk Management?

FX risk management can refer to companies managing foreign currency risk that arises due to changes in exchange rates. It can also refer to minimizing risks in forex trading.

The Bottom Line

Risk is inherent in every trade you take, but as long as you can measure the risk you can manage it. Just don’t overlook the fact that risk can be magnified by using too much leverage with respect to your trading capital as well as being magnified by a lack of liquidity in the market. With a disciplined approach and good trading habits, taking on some risk is the only way to generate good rewards.

Read the original article on Investopedia.

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