Before entries, indicators or "setups", comes one thing: deciding how much you are prepared to lose. This page walks through the core concepts behind account-level risk, risk per trade and daily loss limits in high-risk markets.
Education only · Not trading adviceApplies to Forex / Crypto / Binary
Core Avenqor conceptRecommended before any strategy or setup.
Approx. reading time: 8–12 minutes.
Why risk comes first
In high-risk markets, most traders focus on entries and ignore how much capital is at stake. Risk management is about deciding in advance:
How much of the total account can be lost without "breaking" it.
How much is at risk in one trade or structured idea, relative to the account.
When to stop for the day or week if things are not working.
Examples on this page are generic and simplified. They are here to illustrate ideas, not to suggest what you personally "should" risk.
Three pillars of practical risk management
1. Account-level risk
How much of the account can be lost overall before trading is paused or the approach is re-evaluated.
This avoids "all-in or nothing" thinking.
2. Risk per trade / idea
The planned loss if a position hits its stop or expires worthless, expressed as part of the account value.
3. Daily and weekly limits
Pre-defined points where a trader stops for the day or week if things are not working, to prevent emotional escalation.
Account-level risk and drawdown
Every account has a point where losses become difficult to recover from – either financially or psychologically. A simple starting point is to define a maximum drawdown where trading would pause and the plan would be reviewed.
Example idea
Some traders prefer to keep total drawdown within a limited portion of the account, then step back instead of "doubling down". Others are comfortable with a wider range. The key is deciding this in advance, not during stress.
Why it matters
Helps avoid emotional revenge trading.
Keeps results in a range that can realistically be recovered from.
Makes it easier to stop and review when the approach is not working.
Risk per trade or structured idea
Risk per trade is the amount that would be lost if the idea fails according to the plan. This is usually defined as a portion of the account value, then translated into lot size, contract size or position size.
Conceptual steps
Decide the portion of the account to risk on this idea.
Define where the trade is considered "wrong" (stop level or expiry).
Connect distance to the stop with position size using your platform's contract or pip value.
Platforms usually provide tools or calculators to assist with this.
Multiple positions
When several trades are open in the same direction or on similar instruments, they can behave like one larger idea. Many traders treat this as combined risk, not as separate unrelated bets.
Daily and weekly loss limits
Loss limits act as brakes. They define how much can be lost in a day or week before trading pauses. Without them, it is easy for one emotional session to undo weeks of careful work.
Examples of how traders use limits
Stopping for the day after a fixed number of losing trades.
Stopping after a pre-defined portion of the account is lost in a day or week.
Reducing size after losses instead of increasing it.
These are behavioural tools, not "rules of the market".
Common traps to watch for
Removing stops because a loss feels uncomfortable.
Adding to losing positions without a clear plan.
Increasing size after losses to "get it back in one trade".
Ignoring sleep, food and screen fatigue when making decisions.
Turning concepts into your own plan
Avenqor cannot tell you what exact numbers to choose. What it can do is help you think through the components and document them in a simple, written plan.
Write down a maximum drawdown where you would pause and review your approach.
Decide a typical range for risk per trade or structured idea that feels sustainable for you.
Define daily and weekly loss limits that would trigger a break.
Use a journal or the Avenqor AI tools to check whether you are actually following your plan over time.
If you are unsure what is appropriate for your situation, consider speaking with an independent, qualified financial professional.