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Drawdown

Risk Management

The 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.

Key fact: A 50% drawdown requires a 100% return just to break even. At 75%, you need a 300% return. Keeping drawdowns small is not optional for long-term survival.

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.