Risk-Reward Ratio: How to Calculate and Use It for Smarter Trades Early in my trading career, I placed what I thought was a “sure thing” trade. Tight stop, solid setup. But my target? Completely random—just a number I hoped it would hit. It didn’t. I got stopped out, then watched price move exactly where I expected… after shaking me out. The problem? I had no structured risk-reward plan. The risk-reward ratio (RRR) is your edge in this game. It tells you if a trade is worth taking—not based on gut feeling, but probability. 1️⃣ How to Calculate Risk-Reward Ratio It’s simple: RRR = (Target Price - Entry) / (Entry - Stop Loss) Example: 📌 Entry: $100 📌 Stop Loss: $95 (risk = $5) 📌 Target: $115 (reward = $15) 📌 RRR = 15/5 = 3:1 2️⃣ Why It Matters A 3:1 RRR means that even if you win only 40% of trades, you’re still profitable. Without proper risk-reward, even a high win rate can leave you at breakeven—or worse. 3️⃣ The Myth of “Always 2:1 or 3:1” Not every trade needs the same RRR. Some setups justify a 1.5:1 ratio (high probability), while others need 4:1 or more to be worth the risk. It’s about context. 4️⃣ How to Use RRR for Smarter Trades 📌 Predefine Your Stop & Target – Don’t adjust mid-trade emotionally. 📌 Consider Market Structure – A 3:1 trade is pointless if resistance is at 2:1. 📌 Size Properly – Even great RRR won’t save poor risk management. Trade Wisely, Cheers! Follow, like, comment and share to support our community! El Shaddai: (Hebrew: אֵל שַׁדַּי) – “God Almighty, the All-Sufficient One.” His grace sustains.