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Risk of Ruin: The Math Behind Going Broke

Risk of ruin is the probability that a string of losses wipes out your account, and it falls dramatically when you keep risk per trade low.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
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Risk of Ruin: The Math Behind Going Broke

You can be a profitable trader and still go broke — if you size your bets wrong.

Risk of ruin is the probability that a string of losses will reduce your account to zero (or to a point where you can no longer trade). It's the number that separates "profitable strategy" from "strategy I can actually trade."

The formula (simplified)

For a strategy with an edge, the approximate risk of ruin is:

Risk of ruin = ((1 − edge) / (1 + edge)) ^ units

Where edge is your per-trade advantage and units is your account expressed in risk units (account ÷ risk per trade).

Example: $10,000 account, 1% risk ($100) = 100 units. Edge = 0.05 (5% advantage).

RoR = ((1 − 0.05) / (1 + 0.05)) ^ 100 = (0.905) ^ 100 ≈ 0.004%

That's a 0.004% chance of going broke — essentially zero.

What changes risk of ruin

Risk per trade Edge Risk of ruin
1% 5% ~0%
2% 5% ~1%
5% 5% ~30%
10% 5% ~80%

Two takeaways:

  1. Risk per trade is the dominant lever — doubling it doesn't double risk of ruin, it squares it
  2. Even a positive edge can ruin you if you size too aggressively

The 1%–2% rule explained

Most risk rules exist to drive risk of ruin toward zero, not to maximize returns. The 1%–2% rule works because:

  • At 1% risk, you need ~100 consecutive losses to blow the account
  • At 2%, ~50 losses
  • At 10%, just 10 losses — and 10-trade losing streaks happen to every strategy

A 10-trade losing streak at 1% risk leaves you down 9.6%. The same streak at 10% risk leaves you down 65% — and that's without compounding psychology.

Why edges aren't guaranteed

Risk of ruin assumes your edge is real and stable. In practice:

  • Edges decay as markets change
  • Edges are estimated, not known
  • Execution costs erode the real edge below the backtested one

If your true edge is half what you think, your risk of ruin can be 10× higher than calculated. Treat edge estimates with skepticism.

Practical rules

  1. Cap risk at 1%–2% per trade — use the position size calculator
  2. Track losing streaks in a journal — if your real streaks exceed backtested ones, your edge estimate is too optimistic
  3. Reduce risk during drawdowns — many pros halve risk after a 10% drawdown
  4. Diversify across uncorrelated setups — multiple independent edges cut risk of ruin multiplicatively
  5. Never martingale — increasing size to recover a loss sends risk of ruin toward 100%

The honest truth

A strategy with a real edge and 1% risk per trade is, mathematically, almost impossible to blow up. The traders who go broke don't lack an edge — they lack discipline on size. Risk of ruin is the math that explains why position sizing is the most important skill in trading.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk