The 1% rule is a popular and time-tested strategy to consider. In this article, Elev8, a global CFD broker, provides a mathematical basis for traders to elevate their risk management and support long-term participation in the financial markets.
What is the 1% rule
The 1% rule is a risk management principle stating that a trader should risk no more than 1% of their available trading capital on a single trade. In this case, risk refers to the maximum loss that a trader suffers if the trade moves against them and the stop loss is triggered. For example, a trader with a $100,000 account can open a $50,000 position and still limit their risk to $1,000 (1% of the deposit) if the stop loss is set appropriately from a risk management perspective. In this case, the adverse move should be equal to a 2% price decline. At the same time, a smaller $10,000 position with a wider or undefined stop loss can result in a loss of $2,000 or more if the market moves 20% against it.
Professional traders often adjust this threshold depending on strategy and market conditions. Some reduce risk to 0.5% per trade to protect capital during periods of uncertainty, while others increase it to 2% to pursue higher returns.
The 1% rule helps traders control the only variable they can truly manage in trading and investment—their losses. Financial markets, whether commodities like gold, cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, or currency pairs, are highly volatile and regularly exposed to black swan events that cannot be forecasted using fundamental or technical analysis. The collapse of the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund showed that even Nobel Prize-winning economists and sophisticated quantitative models cannot protect capital when excessive leverage is involved.
The 1% rule also helps prevent behavioural breakdowns such as tilt, panic, and the urge to win back the losses. The difference becomes clear in drawdown dynamics. After 10 consecutive losses, a trader risking 1% per trade is down approximately 10%, a level that is uncomfortable but recoverable without significant changes in strategy. At 5% risk per trade, the same losing streak results in a roughly 40% drawdown, and recovery requires a 67% gain just to return to breakeven. At this point, psychological pressure typically increases sharply, and decision-making begins to deteriorate.
How to implement the 1% rule step by step
Here’s a brief guide on how to use the 1% rule in your trading strategy.
1. Define account size and risk per trade according to the formula:
account balance × 1% = risk per trade
For example, $100,000 × 1% = $1,000. So the maximum loss per trade is $1,000.
2. Convert risk into price distance:
stop loss distance (%) = risk / position size × 100
For example, if the risk is $1,000, and the position size is $50,000, then the stop loss distance is 2% (1,000 / 50,000 = 0.02 = 2%).
3. Calculate the stop loss price. The formula depends on the type of your trade.
For long positions:
stop loss price = entry price × (1 − stop loss distance)
For short positions:
stop loss price = entry price × (1 + stop loss distance)
For example, if your entry price is $100, the stop loss distance is 2%, and you are to enter a long position, then your stop loss should be placed at $98 to ensure 1% risk ($100 × (1 − 0.02) = $98).
Survival over prediction
Trading is not about generating large profits on the next trade, but about staying in the market one thousand trades later. This is only possible when you implement risk management and consistently adhere to it. Kar Yong Ang, a financial market analyst at Elev8 broker, explained the typical mistakes that can undermine your long-term market success.
‘To become a mature trader, you need to eliminate three key behaviours: over-risking in the pursuit of fast growth, stop loss manipulation driven by emotion, and hidden correlation risks. The last refers to a situation where, for instance, multiple seemingly independent 1% positions across different USD pairs are actually driven by the same underlying dollar exposure. This concentrates risk into a single 5% macro bet. In such cases, diversification is only apparent, while the real risk exposure compounds across correlated instruments’, noted Kar Yong Ang. ‘Discipline, structured strategy, and correct risk calculation are what ultimately determine long-term sustainability in trading’, he added.
Before placing the next trade, review the history of your recent positions and recalculate them through the lens of the 1% rule. How much capital would have been preserved if every trade had a predefined and strictly enforced risk limit?
Disclaimer: This article does not contain or constitute investment advice or recommendations and does not consider your investment objectives, financial situation, or needs. Any actions taken based on this content are at your sole discretion and risk—Elev8 does not accept any liability for any resulting losses or consequences.
Elev8 is a global broker that takes trading to a new level. Elev8 provides traders with an ecosystem designed to meet their needs, featuring a wide range of instruments, analytical and educational tools, integrated AI solutions, and responsive customer support. As a socially responsible broker, Elev8 funds various charitable projects and humanitarian efforts worldwide.
This article was written by IL Contributors at investinglive.com.
