Core Definition of Maximum Daily Loss
Maximum Daily Loss is the maximum amount or percentage your account can lose by the end of each trading day.
This is a safety valve that prevents you from making more poor decisions when your emotions are off. It is like a seatbelt in a car - you do not drive recklessly just because you have a seatbelt, but it protects you when an accident happens. All strategies in the Strategy Center have built-in automatic stop-losses, providing your first layer of protection.
How to Set a Reasonable Daily Loss Limit?
| Account Size | Recommended Limit | Description |
|---|---|---|
| < $100K | 3% | More flexible |
| $100K-$500K | 2% | Moderate |
| > $500K | 1-1.5% | Conservative |
Setting principle: This number should be an amount you can calmly accept even if you lose it, without feeling the urge to win it back.
Correct Handling When Triggered
Step 1: Immediately Stop Trading
No matter how many good opportunities remain, immediately stop all trading for the day. Do not think just one more trade to win it back.
Step 2: Step Away from the Computer
Go for a walk, exercise, do anything unrelated to trading. Give your brain at least 15 minutes of cooling-off time.
Step 3: Record the Cause
Write down the reason for today loss:
- Was it a strategy signal issue?
- Was it an execution discipline issue?
- Or just bad luck?
Step 4: Reassess the Next Day
Only after calming down the next day should you reassess the market. For more on mindset adjustment after losses, see The Right Mindset During a Losing Streak.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Continuing to Trade After Trigger
Thinking just one more trade to win it back, only to lose more. Remember: trigger the limit = stop immediately, no exceptions.
Mistake 2: Setting the Limit Too High
A 10-20% limit provides no protection at all. The purpose of a limit is protection, not challenge.
Mistake 3: Revenge Trading the Next Day
Yesterday loss is over - do not bring emotions into the new day. Every day is a fresh start.
Summary
Key principles of daily loss limits:
- Set at 2-3% - this is the maximum you can calmly accept, and can be adjusted based on market conditions through Regime and Risk analysis
- Stop when triggered - no exceptions
- Record the cause - a trading journal is a tool for improvement
- Start fresh the next day - do not bring emotions into the new trading day