Step by-Step Guide to Calculating Position Size
" Learn a step-by-step guide to calculating the perfect position size for your trades. Master risk management, protect your capital, and improve your trading strategy with practical examples and tips."
Wikilix Team
Educational Content Team
9 min
Reading time
Advanced
Difficulty
If you've ever taken an exceptional setup and still lost more than expected, chances are the problem wasn't your analysis - it was the position size. Position sizing is the link between your thought process and your account's longevity. Follow these three steps and you'll know how much to take on before you click "buy or sell".
Choose what percentage you are willing to lose from your account if and when your stop loss gets hit. Many traders use 0.5% - 2%. Less risk enables you to
take more trades while making decisions cool headedly.
Account Size | 1% Risk | 2% Risk |
$3,000 | $30 | $60 |
$5,000 | $50 | $100 |
$10,000 | $100 | $200 |
This figure is your risk in dollars for your next trade.
Your stop should be where the trade idea has been invalidated - not where it "hurts less." Measure the distance between your entry and your stop loss:
Stocks/CFDs: stop distance in currency (e.g. $2.00 per share).
Forex: stop distance in pips (e.g. 50 pips).
Make a note of this number. You're going to need it in step 4.
A 20-cent stop on a quiet stock may work fine; on an earnings day, it may be a coin flip. Look at ATR, recent highs / lows, session ranges or news. If price swings are wide, widen the stop and reduce size (the maths will do this for you).
Simple enough:
Position size = (Account size × Risk %) ÷ Stop distance
How you use it will depend on the market:
For stocks/CFDs (shares):
Shares = Risk ($) ÷ Stop distance ($ per share)
For forex (lots / units)
Lots = Risk ($) ÷ (Stop in pips × pip value per lot)
A handy reminder for USD-quoted major pairs, such as EUR/USD:
1 standard lot (100k) ≈ $10 per pip
1 mini lot (10k) ≈ $1 per pip
1 micro lot (1k) ≈ $0.10 per pip
Example A – Stocks
You have an account of $10,000, risk 1% → $100 risk.
You want to buy a stock at $50, with a stop at $48 (stop-distance $2).
So,
Shares = $100 ÷ $2 = 50 Shares
If your stop is hit, you are risking close to $100 (plus costs)
Account $5,000, risk 1% → $50 risk.
Entry 1.1000, stop 1.0950 → 50 pips
Pip value (per micro lot) → ≈ $0.10
So,
Lots (in micro) = $50 ÷ (50 pips × $0.10) = $50 ÷ $5 = 10 micro lots
Which is the equivalent of 0.10 standard lot (10k units). So a 50-pip loss is also ≈ $50.
Your broker will have minimums and increments (e.g. Set 1 share, Set 0.01 lots).If your ideal size is 37.5 shares, you are going to place 37 shares. In FX, if you calculated .13 lots and your platform is two decimals, place .
13 (or .12 if your platform only allows increments of .01). If you can't remember, always round down to ensure your risk is at or less than your limits.
Ask yourself two quick questions:
Does the position fit inside my daily risk? (i.e. I don't want to take on more than 2-3 losing trades per day of 1% each.)
Is the dollar risk, in my own psyche, acceptable? If it is going to risk $100, and that is going to tempt you into "revenge trading," reduce the risk.
If you are opening a few trades that effectively move together (i.e. EUR/USD and GBP/USD) you are effectively raising your risk. Divide the risk between the trades, or identify your best idea and take that. Survival above all else is better than missing out or leaving a trade on the table.
If the math would have you take a size that is greater than you are comfortable with - or, if size is very small, adjust the stop loss location or leave the trade. The position sizing was there to protect you - do not force a trade that does not conform to your rules.
You should log your account size, risk %, stop distance, and final size. A simple spreadsheet can make your process a habit - and makes the reviews you should be doing every week easy.
Two quick rules of thumb
Start with 1% risk until you can prove you have an edge over 30-50 trades.
If you have metrics that (win ratio, payoff ratio, max drawdown) support increasing your size, do so slowly.
Position sizing is not glamorous, but it is the part of your plan that will allow you to keep trading tomorrow. When you know your risk before you enter trades, your losses are controlled, your emotions don't run rampant, and your edge is able to show up.
If you would like more tangible examples, and templates, for risk management, visit the Learn section of Wikilix - there is plenty to help you develop a safer, steadier approach to the markets.
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