Risk Checklist
The behavioural side of risk management, the checks that make sure a sound position size actually gets used, because most blown accounts fail not on the maths of risk but on the discipline to follow it.
Risk Checklist: The behavioural risk checklist confirms four things before you trade: the position is sized to your plan and not to your conviction, the rupee loss is defined and accepted before entry, your total exposure across positions is sane, and your emotional state is fit to trade rather than driven by fear, greed or a need to recover a loss. The maths of position sizing lives on RiskManagementGyan; this list is about whether you will actually honour it. This is an educational template to adapt, not a signal, and it reduces avoidable mistakes without guaranteeing results.
Risk management has two halves. One is the maths, how much to risk per trade, how to size from a stop, how to cap portfolio heat, and that lives in full on RiskManagementGyan, the network's risk authority. The other half is behavioural: whether you actually follow the maths when a loss is open and emotion is loud. This checklist covers that second half. Most accounts are not lost because the sizing formula was wrong; they are lost because a trader knew the rule and broke it, oversizing to recover, widening a stop, or piling into a position that felt right. Treat any item you cannot answer cleanly as a reason to pause.
How to use this: for the exact position-sizing and portfolio-heat formulas, use RiskManagementGyan. Use this list to confirm your mindset will let you apply them, which is where the discipline actually breaks down.
Is the position sized to plan?
- Confirm the size came from your fixed risk rule and the stop distance, not from how confident you feel about the trade.
- Verify you did not increase size because the setup looks "obvious"; conviction is exactly when overconfidence oversizes.
- Confirm you are not sizing up to recover a recent loss, which is revenge trading dressed as a normal trade.
- For F&O, confirm the leverage is respected: one lot's risk fits your budget, and you are sizing on risk, not on available margin.
- Confirm you would be comfortable taking this exact size on your worst emotional day, not just today.
Is the loss defined and accepted?
- Confirm the stop is placed where the idea is proven wrong, and you know the rupee loss if it is hit, before entry.
- Confirm you can accept that full loss calmly; if the number makes you anxious, the size is too big.
- Verify you have pre-committed to honouring the stop, not moving it wider if price approaches.
- Confirm you are not relying on the position "probably coming back"; hope is not a risk plan.
- Remember a stop caps loss only when price trades through it; on gap-prone days, size for a jump past the stop.
Is total exposure sane?
- Confirm adding this trade keeps your total open risk within the cap you set; several trades can lose together.
- Check correlation: several bank stocks or several long-delta index option trades move as one larger bet, not as diversification.
- Confirm you are within your daily loss limit and have room to take the loss without breaching it.
- Verify you are not over-concentrated in one instrument, sector or a single expiry.
- Confirm free margin is comfortable, so a normal adverse move will not force a square-off. See RiskManagementGyan for the portfolio-heat maths.
Is your emotional state fit to trade?
- Confirm you are calm and clear, not angry, panicked, euphoric or exhausted; strong emotion degrades risk judgment.
- Confirm this trade is a planned setup, not a reaction to FOMO, boredom or the urge to be in the market.
- Check that you are not on tilt after a loss; if you are, the disciplined move is to pause, not to size up.
- Confirm a win streak has not made you casual about risk; overconfidence is when disciplined sizing quietly slips.
- Confirm you are trading only capital you can afford to lose, kept separate from money you need.
If every item clears, your mindset will let you apply the risk maths you already know. If any fails, fix it or skip the trade, never proceed and hope. For the formulas, position sizing, risk of ruin, portfolio heat, drawdown recovery, use RiskManagementGyan. This is educational information, not financial or psychological advice, and it reduces avoidable mistakes without guaranteeing any outcome.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between risk maths and risk psychology?
How do I know if I am sizing to plan or to conviction?
Why must I define the loss before entering?
What emotional states mean I should not trade?
How does leverage change the behavioural risk in F&O?
Should I use this checklist or the RiskManagementGyan formulas?
What is portfolio heat and why check it behaviourally?
Does following this checklist guarantee I avoid big losses?
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.