DeFi Position Sizing: Risk-Based Allocation Strategies
Position sizing is the most underrated skill in trading. Get it wrong and even great trades blow up your account. Get it right and you survive the inevitable bad trades while compounding the winners.
- Risk 1-2% of portfolio per trade; never more than 5% even on highest conviction.
- Position Size = Risk Amount ÷ Stop Loss % — this formula keeps you alive.
- Thrive calculates optimal position sizes based on your risk parameters and trade setups.
Position Size Calculator
Calculate optimal position size based on your risk parameters:
Position Sizing Rules: Risk 1-2% per trade for most setups. Only increase to 3-5% for highest-conviction trades with clear catalysts. Never risk more than 10% on a single position. Adjust size based on volatility—smaller for alts, larger for BTC/ETH.
Why Position Sizing Matters
Most traders focus on entries and exits. Position sizing determines whether you survive long enough to benefit from good calls.
The Math of Ruin
Consider two traders with identical 60% win rates:
Trader A: Risks 2% per trade
10 losses in a row (rare but happens): -20% drawdown
Still has 80% of capital, can recover
Trader B: Risks 20% per trade
10 losses in a row: -89% drawdown (near bankruptcy)
Needs 800% gain just to break even
Same win rate, radically different outcomes. Position sizing is survival.
The Volatility Factor
Crypto is 3-5x more volatile than traditional markets:
- BTC can move 10-20% in days
- Altcoins can move 30-50% in days
- Microcaps can move 50-80% in days
Stock market position sizing rules don't apply directly. Crypto requires more conservative sizing.
Asymmetric Returns
Position sizing also captures upside. Proper sizing means:
- You're in meaningful positions when you're right
- You don't miss multi-baggers due to fear
- Your winners outweigh your losers in dollar terms
Key Insight: Position sizing isn't about being aggressive or conservative. It's about being mathematically optimal. Risk too little and you never compound. Risk too much and you eventually blow up.
The Core Position Sizing Formula
Risk-Based Sizing
Position Size = (Portfolio × Risk %) ÷ Stop Loss %
Example:
- Portfolio: $50,000
- Risk per trade: 2%
- Risk amount: $50,000 × 0.02 = $1,000
- Stop loss: 10% below entry
- Position size: $1,000 ÷ 0.10 = $10,000
If this $10,000 position hits your 10% stop, you lose exactly $1,000 (2% of portfolio).
Why This Works
- Consistent risk: Every trade risks the same percentage
- Automatic adjustment: Tighter stops = larger positions; wider stops = smaller
- Compound-friendly: As portfolio grows, position sizes grow proportionally
Adjusting for Conviction
Not all trades deserve equal size:
- Low conviction: 0.5-1% risk (speculative, unproven setup)
- Medium conviction: 1-2% risk (standard setups)
- High conviction: 2-3% risk (strong catalyst, clear edge)
- Maximum conviction: 3-5% risk (rare, exceptional setups)
High conviction trades should be rare. If everything is high conviction, nothing is.
| Asset Type | Typical Volatility | Max Position | Risk Per Trade | Stop Distance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BTC/ETH | Medium | 15-25% | 1-2% | 5-15% |
| Large Cap Alts | High | 10-15% | 1-2% | 10-20% |
| Mid Cap Alts | Very High | 5-10% | 0.5-1% | 15-25% |
| Small Cap | Extreme | 2-5% | 0.5% | 20-30% |
Portfolio-Level Rules
Maximum Single Position
Even with small risk per trade, cap total exposure:
- Blue chips (BTC, ETH): Max 25-40% of portfolio
- Large caps: Max 10-15% per position
- Mid caps: Max 5-10% per position
- Small caps: Max 2-5% per position
Correlation Risk
Correlated positions = combined risk:
Example: You hold 5% each in SOL, BONK, JTO, PYTH (Solana ecosystem).
In a Solana crash, all 4 drop together.
Real risk: 20%, not 4 separate 5% positions.
Solution: Treat correlated positions as one when assessing total risk.
Cash Reserve
Always maintain dry powder:
- 20-30% cash for opportunities (crashes, new setups)
- Cash also reduces overall portfolio volatility
- Psychological benefit: easier to hold through drawdowns
Rebalancing
Winners grow; losers shrink. Periodically rebalance:
- Trim positions that grow beyond max allocation
- Cut losers before they breach stop (don't average down)
- Monthly or quarterly rebalancing for long-term holds
Advanced Sizing Techniques
Kelly Criterion
Mathematically optimal bet sizing:
Kelly % = W - (L / R)
W = Win rate (as decimal)
L = Loss rate (1 - W)
R = Average win / Average loss
Example: 55% win rate, 2:1 avg win/loss
Kelly = 0.55 - (0.45 / 2) = 0.325 = 32.5%
In practice: Use "Half Kelly" (16.25% in example) because:
- We don't know our true edge precisely
- Crypto has fat tails (extreme moves)
- Half Kelly reduces volatility significantly with small return reduction
Volatility-Adjusted Sizing
Normalize position sizes by volatility:
- Calculate 30-day volatility for each asset
- Size inversely to volatility
- High vol asset gets smaller size; low vol gets larger
This creates "risk parity"—each position contributes equal risk.
Scaling In/Out
Scaling in:
- Enter 1/3 position initially
- Add 1/3 on confirmation
- Final 1/3 on breakout/catalyst
Scaling out:
- Sell 1/3 at 2x
- Sell 1/3 at 3-5x
- Let 1/3 ride with trailing stop
Common Position Sizing Mistakes
Mistake 1: Sizing Based on "Feeling"
"This one feels good, I'll go bigger."
Your feelings aren't edge. Use the formula. Conviction should adjust risk %, not bypass the system entirely.
Mistake 2: Not Adjusting for Volatility
Same dollar size on BTC and a microcap is wildly different risk. The microcap can move 50% overnight; BTC won't.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Correlation
Five 5% positions in correlated assets = one 25% position. Think in terms of correlated exposure, not individual positions.
Mistake 4: No Stop = Infinite Position Size
If you don't have a stop, the formula breaks. Every trade needs a defined exit point for the math to work.
Mistake 5: Increasing Size After Losses
"I need to make it back." This is revenge trading. Stick to the system. If anything, reduce size during drawdowns.
Truth: Position sizing is boring. It's not as exciting as finding the next 100x. But it's what separates traders who survive from traders who blow up. Master it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is position sizing?
Position sizing determines how much capital to allocate to a single trade. It's based on your total portfolio, risk tolerance, and the specific trade setup. Proper position sizing protects you from catastrophic losses while allowing meaningful gains.
How much should I risk per trade?
Most professional traders risk 1-2% of their portfolio per trade. This means if your portfolio is $50,000, you risk $500-1,000 maximum per trade. For high-conviction setups, you might go to 3-5%, but never more than 5% on any single trade.
How do I calculate position size from risk?
Position Size = Risk Amount / Stop Loss %. If you want to risk $500 and your stop loss is 10% below entry, your position size = $500 / 0.10 = $5,000. This ensures losing the trade only costs you $500 (1% of $50K portfolio).
What is the Kelly Criterion?
Kelly Criterion calculates optimal bet size based on win rate and risk/reward ratio. Formula: Kelly % = Win Rate - (Loss Rate / Avg Win÷Loss Ratio). Crypto traders often use "half Kelly" (50% of the calculated size) because Kelly assumes you know your edge precisely—we don't.
Should I size positions differently for different assets?
Yes. Higher volatility assets need smaller position sizes. A 10% stop on a stablecoin yield position is very different from 10% on a microcap. Size inversely to volatility: smaller for alts, larger for BTC/ETH, largest for stables.
How does leverage affect position sizing?
With leverage, size based on notional value, not margin. If you use 5x leverage with $1,000 margin, your position is $5,000. Your 1% risk applies to the full $5,000, not $1,000. Leverage doesn't change proper sizing—it changes capital efficiency.
What is max portfolio allocation per position?
Even if risk is small, avoid concentrating too much in one position. Common rules: max 10% per position for large caps, max 5% for mid caps, max 2-3% for small caps. This limits damage from gaps through stops or black swan events.
How do I handle correlated positions?
Correlated positions act as one larger position for risk purposes. If you hold 5 altcoins that move together, treat their combined risk as one position. In a crash, they all drop together. Reduce size when adding correlated exposure.