Trading CFDs without a proper risk management strategy can expose you to unnecessary risk. For example, if you allocate a large portion of your trading capital to a trade without a proper risk management strategy, you put all of your trading capital at risk meaning that if you sustain a loss you will no longer be in a position to trade. Losing your entire capital base can force you out of the market and you will not even have the opportunity to recoup your losses.

The most common form of risk management is position sizing this is also known as the fixed dollar trade size model. In this example an equal amount of capital is used for each trade.

For example, if you have $100,000 to invest, you need to figure out how much to put into the trade. To figure this out you would simply divide $100,000 by the price of the CFD. If the last traded price of the CFD was $8.50 you would divide this by $100,000 to determine the amount of CFDs you can buy, in this case the number would be 11,764.

In order to determine the amount of risk involved in the trade you will have to work out how much you can afford to lose if the CFD moves against you and set your stop-loss at this point. This is also known as the stop-loss distance, which is the distance between the entry and stop-loss price.

For example, if your stop-loss is $8.00 and entry price was $8.50, this means that your stop-loss distance would be $0.50. If you have 10,000 CFDs your risk would be 10,000 multiplied by $0.50 or $5,000. In this case your risk would be $5000, which equates to the amount that you could lose should the trade move against you and you get stopped out.

It is also important to factor in the cost of commission and any financing charges that you may have been incurred from holding the position overnight.

In the fixed dollar trade size model the number of CFDs that you buy and sell each time will not always be the same, this is because the stop-loss size will vary depending on the risk appetite that you have on the trade.

Another form of risk management is compounding, this means that as your account balance increases, you are able to open larger positions.

For example, if you have a starting balance of $100,000 and you have determined that you can afford to have 10 trades open at any given time. As your account balance grows, you will be able to take on larger trades. This strategy can be used up to a point when your drawdown gets too big for your liking and risk appetite.

It is also important to note that if you are trading a CFD that has liquidity issues, you may get to a point where your trade sizes are too large.

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