What This Tool Does
This interactive calculator helps you find the right position size for any trade based on your portfolio size and risk limit. Youβll instantly see how many shares to buy and how much youβre risking β so that even if you lose, your portfolio stays safe and consistent.
Step 1
Enter your portfolio size and how much risk (in %) you take per trade.
Step 2
Add entry price, stop price, and small slippage/fee (default $0.02).
Step 3
See your ideal position size and total dollar risk update instantly below.
Example
You have a $200,000 portfolio and you risk 1% per trade ($2,000). You want to buy at $150 with a stop at $140.
β Per-share risk = $10
β Shares = $2,000 Γ· $10 = 200 shares
β Dollar at risk = $2,000
*This example shows how risk remains constant no matter what stock you trade.
Risk Management Playbook: Position Sizing, Loss Brakes, and Time Stops
Drawdowns kill compounding. This playbook gives you simple, repeatable rules that cap downside without strangling upside. Use the position size calculator, adopt a portfolio loss brake, and add a time stop to avoid dead money.
- Benchmark: SPY (total return); Risk-free: 3-mo T-Bill.
- Costs: 0.06β0.15%/yr ETF fee; 0.03% slippage per trade (assumed).
- Liquidity: avg daily $ volume β₯ $20M for single names.
- Position risk limit: 1.0% of portfolio per trade (default).
- Portfolio loss brake: review at β12% trailing max-DD (monthly).
- Time stop: exit if 8 weeks with no progress & close < 50-DMA.
Position size =
Risk $ / (Entry β Stop). Use ATR(14)Γ1.5 as a sensible initial stop distance if you donβt have a technical level.(Portfolio Γ TargetVol) / (DailyVol in $).Position Size (shares)
Dollar at Risk
| Model | CAGR | Stdev | Sharpe | Max DD | Worst Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPY Buy & Hold | 8.68% | 14.81% | 0.47 | 52.19% | -36% |
| SPY + 12% Loss Brake (monthly) | 8.10% | 11.30% | 0.56 | 26.4% | -12% |
The 12% Loss Brake strategy demonstrates how active risk control can improve long-term portfolio resilience. While the CAGR dropped slightly compared to buy-and-hold (8.10% vs 8.68%), volatility fell significantly and the Sharpe ratio improved from 0.47 to 0.56. This means investors achieved more return per unit of risk while cutting maximum drawdown almost in half (52% β 26%).
For most intermediate investors, this approach offers a smoother equity curve β fewer sleepless nights, faster recovery after market stress, and less emotional decision-making. The Loss Brake acts like an automatic seatbelt: it wonβt drive returns higher, but it keeps your portfolio alive to compound another day.