Position Management Basics — Something More Important than Predicting Price
January 2026 · 10 min read
A harsh truth: the vast majority of retail investors lose money not because they predicted the direction wrong, but because position management was a mess. Being right about direction but getting liquidated hurts more than being wrong.
Core Goals of Position Management
- Survival first: Ensure no single loss knocks you out (liquidation or sleepless nights).
- Let profits run: Positions that are right should grow as the trend develops.
- Control drawdown: The drop from peak to trough in account equity must be manageable.
Strategy 1: Fixed Ratio Method (Most Recommended for Beginners)
Risk per trade should not exceed 1%~2% of total capital.
Example: You have 100,000 principal, single trade max loss = 100,000 × 2% = 2,000 yuan.
If stop-loss is 5% from entry price, then:
This means you use 40,000 of your 100,000 principal to open a position. When stop-loss triggers at 5% loss, you lose 2,000 (2% of total capital).
Strategy 2: Fixed Amount Method
Use a fixed amount for each trade, regardless of total capital changes. Suitable for smaller capital (<50,000) and high-frequency traders.
Disadvantage: As capital grows, fixed amount becomes a smaller percentage — low capital utilization. As capital shrinks, fixed amount becomes a larger percentage — accelerates losses.
Strategy 3: Pyramid Adding Method
After trend confirmation, add to winning positions in batches, but with decreasing add-on sizes. This keeps average cost favorable and risk controlled.
| Batch | Price | Add-on Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st (Base) | $100 | $2,000 | Initial trend confirmation |
| 2nd (Add) | $105 | $1,500 | Trend continues, move stop to cost |
| 3rd (Add) | $110 | $1,000 | Strong trend, move stop to protect profits |
⚠️ Pyramid adding only works in trending markets. In choppy markets, you'll get stopped out repeatedly.
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Iron Rules of Position Management for Futures Trading
- Leverage not exceeding 5x (beginners recommended under 2x). High leverage = high probability of ruin.
- Use isolated margin mode cautiously: In cross margin mode, one position's loss can eat the entire account's margin. Recommended to use isolated margin mode.
- Always set stop-loss: Trading futures without stop-loss is like driving on the highway without a seatbelt.
- Single direction position not exceeding 30% of total capital: Diversify across 2-3 uncorrelated assets to reduce correlation risk.
Kelly Formula: Scientifically Optimal Position Sizing
The Kelly Formula gives the theoretically optimal position ratio:
Where:
- f* = Optimal position ratio
- p = Win rate (percentage of profitable trades)
- q = Loss rate (1 - p)
- b = Win/loss ratio (average win ÷ average loss)
Example: If your strategy has 55% win rate and 2:1 win/loss ratio, then f* = (0.55×2 - 0.45) / 2 = 32.5%.
⚠️ In practice, it's recommended to halve the Kelly Formula result (i.e., "half Kelly") because estimates of win rate and win/loss ratio usually have errors.
Summary
Position management is the "survival system" of trading. Compared to accurately predicting the next move, controlling each trade's risk to 1%~2% of total capital is what keeps you alive long-term — and staying alive is the only qualification to talk about profits.
📚 This article is part of the Learning Center series, continuously updated.