Here’s the brutal truth: most retail traders fail because they don’t calculate risk before entering a trade.
The risk/reward ratio is dead simple — divide your maximum loss by your target profit. That’s it.
Here’s a real example:
You’re longing Bitcoin. Your analysis says:
Profit target: +15%
Stop-loss: -5%
Risk/reward ratio: 5/15 = 0.33 (or 1:3)
Translation? For every $1 you risk, you stand to make $3. On a $100 position, you lose $5 to potentially gain $15.
Some traders flip the math (reward/risk = 15/5 = 3), but it’s the same concept — higher numbers are better.
The plot twist: Win rate doesn’t matter as much as you think.
A trader with only 20% win rate can crush it if they use 1:10 risk/reward setups. They lose 8 trades, win 2, and still profit. Meanwhile, someone with 60% win rate on 1:1 setups barely breaks even.
This is asymmetric opportunity — the upside is way bigger than the downside.
The play: Before you FOMO into any trade, ask yourself:
Where’s my invalidation point? (stop-loss)
Where’s my exit? (profit target)
What’s the ratio?
If it doesn’t make sense on a spreadsheet, it won’t make sense in your portfolio either.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Risk/Reward Ratio: The One Metric That Separates Pro Traders from Gamblers
Here’s the brutal truth: most retail traders fail because they don’t calculate risk before entering a trade.
The risk/reward ratio is dead simple — divide your maximum loss by your target profit. That’s it.
Here’s a real example:
You’re longing Bitcoin. Your analysis says:
Translation? For every $1 you risk, you stand to make $3. On a $100 position, you lose $5 to potentially gain $15.
Some traders flip the math (reward/risk = 15/5 = 3), but it’s the same concept — higher numbers are better.
The plot twist: Win rate doesn’t matter as much as you think.
A trader with only 20% win rate can crush it if they use 1:10 risk/reward setups. They lose 8 trades, win 2, and still profit. Meanwhile, someone with 60% win rate on 1:1 setups barely breaks even.
This is asymmetric opportunity — the upside is way bigger than the downside.
The play: Before you FOMO into any trade, ask yourself:
If it doesn’t make sense on a spreadsheet, it won’t make sense in your portfolio either.