You’ve Got 6 Figures to Trade — But Are You Sizing Like a Pro?

There’s a reason so many six-figure accounts blow up within months of going “all in” on trading.

And it’s not because they didn’t have good ideas.

It’s because they didn’t know how much to risk per trade — or worse, they guessed.

This post is going to show you why oversized trades destroy performance, what to do instead, and how to use Gextron to size every trade with confidence.

The Sizing Mistake That Wipes Out Most New Traders

Here’s what usually happens.

A trader starts with $100k… maybe $200k.

They’re excited. Motivated. Ready to grow.

And on trade one, they throw $10k or $20k into a setup — risking 10% or more of their account — thinking that’s what it takes to see real gains.

It feels bold. It feels right.

Until four losses in a row hit.

Let’s break down what that looks like.

Four Trades. Thirty-Four Percent Gone.

  • Trade 1: $200,000 → $180,000
  • Trade 2: $180,000 → $162,000
  • Trade 3: $162,000 → $145,800
  • Trade 4: $145,800 → $131,220

That’s -34.4% in just 4 trades.

Now you need to make back 52% just to break even.

This isn’t hypothetical. It’s the math.

And it happens to traders every single day.

“But I Need to Risk Big to Make Big…”

No — you need to last.

Because consistency compounds.

And if you size too large early on, the compounding never even starts.

Here’s what that same 4-loss streak looks like with proper risk:

The Pro Move: 2% Risk Per Trade

  • Trade 1: $200,000 → $196,000
  • Trade 2: $196,000 → $192,080
  • Trade 3: $192,080 → $188,238
  • Trade 4: $188,238 → $184,473

Only -7.8% down.

You’re still sharp. Still composed. Still in the game.

That’s what sizing correctly gives you — staying power.

Sizing Isn’t Just About Math — It’s About Psychology

Here’s what oversized trades do:

  • They trigger fear after a loss
  • They fuel greed after a win
  • They make you doubt your strategy
  • They push you to revenge trade

And none of that is necessary.

What You Should Be Doing Instead

If you’re learning to trade with a 6-figure portfolio, here’s the move:

  • Risk 1–2% max per trade
  • Size based on risk, not just position dollar amount
  • Anchor your trade to a defined stop loss
  • Let math, not emotion, determine how big you go

Final Word

You worked hard to build your six-figure portfolio.

Don’t lose it by trading like someone trying to get rich on a Hail Mary.

Size every trade like a pro.
Trade with edge.
Protect your capital — because that’s your real power.