Gearing
Risk ManagementAnother term for leverage in trading. Gearing describes the ratio of your position size to your actual capital. A gearing ratio of 20:1 means you control a position 20 times larger than your margin deposit.
What Is Gearing?
Gearing (also called leverage) is what makes forex accessible to retail traders. With gearing of 30:1, a $1,000 deposit controls a $30,000 position. This amplifies both profits and losses by the same factor. If your position gains 1%, you earn 30% on your deposited margin. If it loses 1%, you lose 30%. Under EU/ESMA rules, maximum gearing for retail traders is 30:1 on major pairs and 20:1 on minor pairs. Some jurisdictions allow up to 500:1.
How Gearing Affects Your Account
High gearing is the main reason retail traders blow accounts. A $1,000 account with 100:1 gearing controlling $100,000 in positions will receive a Margin Call from just a 1% adverse move. Even the most liquid pairs can easily move 1% in a single session. Use the Margin Calculator to see exactly how much margin your intended position requires, and keep total gearing below 10:1 for a more sustainable approach.
Effective Gearing vs. Maximum Gearing
Your broker may offer 30:1, but that does not mean you should use it. Effective gearing is your actual total position size divided by your account equity. If you have $5,000 and open $20,000 in positions, your effective gearing is 4:1, well within safe limits. Professional traders rarely exceed effective gearing of 5:1 to 10:1, regardless of what their broker allows. Control your effective gearing through Position Sizing and you control your risk.
Related Terms
Leverage
A mechanism that allows you to control a position larger than your deposit. Expressed as a ratio like 1:30, meaning $1 controls $30 in currency.
Margin
The deposit required to open and maintain a leveraged position. Margin is not a fee. It is collateral held by the broker while your trade is open.
Exposure
The total value of your open positions in the market. Also refers to how much risk you have to a particular currency, sector, or direction.
Margin Call
A notification from your broker that your account equity has fallen below the required maintenance margin level. If triggered, you must either deposit additional funds or close positions to restore your margin ratio.