Drawdown
Risk ManagementThe decline in an account's value from its peak to its lowest point before recovering. Drawdown is measured as a percentage and is one of the most important metrics for evaluating trading performance.
What Is Drawdown in Forex?
Drawdown measures how much your trading account drops from a high point before it climbs back. If your account reaches $10,000 and then falls to $8,500, you have a $1,500 drawdown, or 15%. Every trader experiences drawdowns. What separates consistent traders from the rest is how they manage and limit them.
Drawdown is typically expressed as a percentage of the peak value. A 10% drawdown means the account lost 10% from its highest balance. The recovery needed is always larger than the drawdown itself: a 20% drawdown requires a 25% gain to break even, and a 50% drawdown requires a 100% gain.
Why Drawdown Matters More Than Profit
Two traders can both return 30% in a year, but one might have a Maximum Drawdown of 8% while the other hit 45%. The first trader took a far smoother path. Professional fund managers and prop firms set strict drawdown limits, often 5-10% daily and 10-20% overall, because large drawdowns are mathematically difficult to recover from and psychologically damaging.
Controlling Drawdown
The primary tool for managing drawdown is Position Sizing. Risking 1-2% of your account per trade means even a streak of 10 consecutive losses only produces a roughly 10-20% drawdown. Combine this with a solid Risk-Reward Ratio and you give your strategy room to recover. Use the Position Size Calculator to keep your risk per trade consistent as your account balance changes.
Related Terms
Maximum Drawdown
The largest peak-to-trough decline in account value over a specific period. Maximum drawdown (MDD) represents the worst-case loss scenario a strategy has experienced and is a key metric in evaluating risk.
Money Management
The overall discipline of managing trading capital through position sizing, risk limits, and account rules to preserve capital and grow an account sustainably over time.
Risk-Reward Ratio
The relationship between how much you risk on a trade and how much you stand to gain. A 1:2 risk-reward ratio means you risk $1 to potentially make $2.
Floating P/L
The unrealized profit or loss on open positions based on current market prices. Floating P/L changes with every price tick until the position is closed.