Listen, managing risk in contract trading is the difference between surviving and blowing up your account. I'll explain how it really works, not with dry formulas but with a practical stop loss example you can use right now.



Let's start with a real situation: you have 666 USDT, you're watching DOGE at 0.46 and thinking of going long with 10x leverage. The question is: how much can you afford to lose?

Common sense says a maximum of 1-2% of your capital. That means your maximum loss should be between 6.66 and 13.32 USDT. Simple, right? But here are the details that make the difference.

If you open 10,000 DOGE at 0.46, your used margin is 460 USDT (4.600 divided by 10). Now you need to calculate the exact point to exit. Take the maximum loss you accept, divide it by the number of tokens, and you get the size of the stop loss. With an 1% risk, each DOGE costs you 0.000666 USDT in negative movement. So your stop loss example will be at 0.45933 USDT.

For a 2% risk? Same process: 13.32 divided by 10,000 = 0.001332 per token. Stop loss at 0.45867.

Many traders skip this step and say: "I'll set the stop loss 1% below the entry price, that's enough." Technically, it's a simplified stop loss example that works, but it doesn't account for leverage. With 10x, things move fast. If you only use 1% from the entry price (0.4554), you risk losing 10% of your account, not 1%. See the difference?

For the take profit, the risk-reward ratio is crucial. If you risk 6.66, you should aim to gain at least 13.32 (ratio 1:2). So, take profit at 0.46092. Or push it to 0.46138 for a 1:3 ratio, if the market allows.

One tip that will change your trading: don't open the entire position at once. Enter gradually, especially with this leverage. And when the price approaches the take profit and volume increases, you can scale out partially instead of closing everything.

The stop loss example I showed you isn't just theory. It's what serious traders use every day. Discipline in respecting it is what separates those who accumulate capital from those who get liquidated.

One last thing: always check the liquidation price on the platform. Your stop loss must be well above that, or you risk forced liquidation before you can exit. If liquidation is at 0.45, your stop loss should be at least 0.455.

This method works whether you use 10x or 5x leverage. Scale it according to your capital and risk tolerance. It’s not glamorous, but it’s how you preserve your account over time.
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