Course overview
1. What is gold trading?2. How does gold trading work?3. How do leverage and margin work? - gold4. Using risk management in gold trading5. Conclusion4. Using risk management in gold trading
While potentially profitable, forex trading carries inherent risks, so applying basic risk management strategies is crucial. These include:
- Using stop-loss and take-profit orders to protect against emotion and greed
- Using money management to limit risk per trade
- Diversifying capital across different currency pairs
- Avoiding excessive leverage
Psychology is also crucial for staying disciplined, avoiding impulsive decisions, and managing expectations. Focusing on long-term consistency is essential.
Find out more about Risk Management in forex in Axi’s Risk Management course.
An example of a gold trade
Let´s assume that you have $10,000 in your trading account. You have done your analysis and identified a trading opportunity in gold, with the expectation that the price will rise in the short term.
You place a ‘long’ (buy) XAUUSD trade at the current market price of $2,300.
Your analysis tells you that you should set a ‘stop-loss’ (a limit to minimise potential losses) at $2,260 and the ‘take-profit’ (a target where you conclude the transaction and secure your earnings) at $2,380.
The maximum loss is therefore 4,000 pips*, while the maximum gain is 8,000 pips, giving you a healthy risk-to-reward ratio of 1:2.
* A ‘pip’ is the smallest unit of price. If XAUUSD moves from 2,300.01 to 2,300.02, that is a one-pip move.
What about the trade size?
A popular method is to express the maximum risk you are willing to take as percentage of your balance. For example, if you are willing to risk 2% of your balance per trade, you can allocate 200 USD ($10,000 x 0.02) to this specific position.
The size of a trade is expressed in Lots. 1 Lot of XAUUSD is worth 100 contracts, which gives it a notional value of 100 × the current spot price of gold. Assuming a price of $2,300, the notional value would therefore be $230,000.
Your preferred trade size would therefore be 0.05 Lots, as:
0.05 lots = 1 pip = 5 cents ($0.05)
0.05 lots = 0.05 × 4000 = $200
Quiz
1/1
What is the significance of a favourable risk-to-reward ratio in gold trading?
B) It suggests a potential for higher returns relative to the risk taken.
C) It guarantees a profitable trade.
D) It eliminates the need for a stop-loss order.