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Educational only — not financial advice. The math illustrates survival; it does not predict returns. Most active traders lose money.
Concept · Definitive Guide

Risk of Ruin & Expectancy

Why how much you bet matters more than how often you're right.

Overview

Risk of ruin is the probability that a string of losses wipes you out before your edge can pay off. It's the most important number in trading that almost no beginner calculates — because it proves that how much you bet matters more than how often you're right.

The math

Risk of ruin — even with an edge, bet too big and you blow up 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% 1% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% risk per trade (% of capital) risk of ruin 52% edge 55% edge Same positive edge, 1:1 payoff — ruin risk explodes as bet size grows.
Two systems with the same positive edge and 1:1 payoff. Ruin risk stays near zero at small bet sizes and explodes as you risk more per trade — the curve almost everyone underestimates. (Illustrative.)
expectancy (R) = (win% × avg win) − (loss% × avg loss) risk of ruin rises sharply with risk-per-trade, even when expectancy is positive

Two things decide survival: a positive expectancy (the edge) and a small fraction of capital risked per trade (the bet size). You can have the first and still be ruined by getting the second wrong.

Why position size dominates

A 60%-win system that risks 25% per trade can still hit a losing streak that ends it; a 52%-win system risking 1% is almost impossible to bust. Drawdowns also compound cruelly: a 50% loss needs a 100% gain just to break even. That asymmetry is why professionals obsess over position sizing and keep per-trade risk small — survival first, returns second.

Honest assessment

Survival comes from

  • Risking a small, fixed % per trade (often ≤1–2%).
  • A genuinely positive expectancy.
  • Sizing down after drawdowns.
  • Accepting many small losses.

Ruin comes from

  • Over-betting a good edge.
  • Negative expectancy dressed up by a high win rate.
  • Adding to losers / no stops.
  • One catastrophic, unsized trade.

The math here is not opinion — risk of ruin and the geometry of drawdowns are exact. The practical takeaway is universal: protect against ruin first, optimise returns second.

Practice

Can a system with a real edge still go broke?

Yes — if you bet too big. Even a positive-edge system has a risk of ruin that climbs steeply with position size; over-betting can wipe out an account that 'should' have made money.

What is expectancy in R?

Expectancy = (win% × average win) − (loss% × average loss), measured in R. Positive expectancy is the mathematical definition of an edge — an expectation over many trades, not a promise on any one.

Why does risk-per-trade matter more than win rate for survival?

Because ruin risk is dominated by bet size relative to capital. A great edge bet too large still risks ruin; a modest edge risked small can be nearly bullet-proof.

This concept in the knowledge graph

PrerequisitesRisk & position sizing
UnlocksSurvival-first money management
RelatedPsychology, the expectancy formula
ToolThe site's R / expectancy calculator

Resources

References

  1. Risk of ruin & the gambler's ruin problem — overview.
  2. Expectancy & position sizing — Van Tharp's R-multiple framework — Investopedia.