📊 Futures Trading: Risk Management with 1:3 Ratio
1% Stop Loss • 3% Take Profit • No Emotions • Automation
Hey traders,
I've been trading futures on
Binance and
Bybit for a while and want to share my approach to risk management.
I use a simple rule:
1% stop loss and
3% take profit. This gives a
1:3 risk-reward ratio.
- The market needs to move in your favor only 1 out of 3 times to stay profitable
- Removes emotions from trading
- Easy to stick to
I've automated this approach with a bot that scans 600+ coins for the best setups in real-time.
If anyone's interested in how it works or wants to discuss risk management strategies, feel free to reply here or DM me.
Question: What's your preferred risk-reward ratio? How do you manage risk in volatile markets?
Let's discuss. No spam — just real trading experience.
Everyone agree?
Question: What's your preferred risk-reward ratio? How do you manage risk in volatile markets.
Whether it's a volatile market or not, what gives traders an edge in the market are: 1. High win rate and 2. Proper risk management. Of which having a higher reward compared to the risk maximises it. The risk to reward ratio I love starts from 1:2, which is the minimum.
However, the higher it is, the better. That's why I always like to trade with the strategy that can limit the stop loss and allows me to earn more by increasing my reward.
If I could get to the system of 1:5, that should be a gold standard for me.
That's a solid approach. 1:2 is definitely a good baseline - it keeps the win rate reasonable and the risk manageable.
I also agree that 1:5 would be ideal, but in practice, it's much harder to hit consistently without getting stopped out early. That's why I personally stick to 1:3, it gives a good balance between risk and reward, and keeps the system simple to follow.
What kind of setups do you usually look for when targeting 1:5?
I think this really differs for every trader.
Because for me, I'm used to being a minimum 1:2 risk reward ratio trader, which for me is a balanced approach.
Break-even win rate is about 33.3%.
I don't know if this is common for every traders out there, it also depends also like maybe if you are a day trader.
That makes a lot of sense. 2:3 is a solid and balanced ratio, it gives you a higher win rate and keeps the losses manageable, especially for day trading where volatility can be unpredictable.
I've tried that approach too, and it definitely helps with consistency. The main reason I switched to 1:3 was to simplify the math and stay more disciplined over time, but honestly, I think the best ratio is the one you can stick to without second-guessing yourself.
Out of curiosity, do you usually adjust your targets based on market conditions, or do you keep it fixed?
I like 1:3 risk-reward ratio. The problem is, such thing doesn't happen too often, only happened at sudden dip and something like that.
To face lack of opportunity with that risk-reward ratio, I adjusted it sometime taking a more risky trading position. 1:3 is easily profitable most of the time, it just doesn't appear too often for you to make enough profit and not just wasting time watching the market.
That's exactly the challenge with 1:3, it's a great ratio, but good setups don't appear every day. I went through the same thing. When the market is slow, it's tempting to adjust the target or enter lower-quality setups just to stay active.
What helped me was not forcing it. I’d rather wait for a solid setup than chase a weaker one and get stopped out. It takes patience, but over time it pays off.
Do you usually wait for high-quality setups, or do you take smaller ones when the market is quiet?
I've been trading futures on Binance and Bybit for a while and want to share my approach to risk management.
I use a simple rule: 1% stop loss and 3% take profit. This gives a 1:3 risk-reward ratio.
Hmm... It's interesting, I haven't thought about something similar and it's even more interesting with futures because you are able to use high leverage and you don't actually need the coin to move up and down by 1 to 3%.
But here is the thing, how are you gonna choose the right time? You are aiming for 3% profit, which means that even at 2.9% profit, you won't close the position and there is also the possibility that the price will go down and you'll end up with the loss if it goes down to the point where your 1% stop loss order gets activated. This process gets even more complicated if you use higher than 1x leverage.
That's a really sharp point and you're right, it's one of the trickiest parts of this approach.
The 3% take-profit is based on the price movement, not on your margin. So even with 10x or 20x leverage, the target stays the same in terms of price. What changes is the position size, not the distance to the target.
And you're also right about the 2.9% scenario. That's where discipline comes in. I don't manually adjust the target once it's set. If the bot sets a 3% TP, I let it run. Sometimes it gets close and reverses, that's part of the game. But over time, the ones that hit more than make up for the ones that don't.
Do you usually adjust your targets manually during the trade, or do you set and forget?
Question: What's your preferred risk-reward ratio? How do you manage risk in volatile markets?
Let's discuss. No spam — just real trading experience.
I don’t have a fixed risk to rewards ratio, that depends on my plan and how the market analysis I do turn out to be. This depends on my profit target but if one stick to a 1:3 risk to reward ratio, such traders tends to be profitable while managing their risk well. I like the idea of 1:3 risk to reward ratio, but most times, the emotions that comes in during trading makes one changes their plan or approach and get greedy, but sticking to it has really helped more traders to stay profitable.
Using a trading bot is never my thing, I don’t really fancy it because they’re also prone to error and cannot manage proficiently as a human will do. Using bot to trade is basically yourself accepting defeat that you can’t do it yourself and needs help. Have a plan, trade your plan and come back to analyse where needs to be fix or adjusted to stay profitable, that’s the best way to remain actively profitable in trading.
Good question, volatile markets are where risk management really gets tested.
In high volatility, I stick to the same 1:3 ratio, but I adjust position size based on current ATR. If the market is moving faster, I reduce size to keep the risk in dollars the same. The ratio stays unchanged, only the position size adapts.
I also avoid entering during major news events unless the bot picks up a clear setup. That's helped me avoid unnecessary spikes.
How do you usually adjust your approach when volatility spikes?