Drawdown
In Simple Terms: Drawdown measures how much your account has dropped from its highest point — it's the pain you actually feel.
Drawdown is the percentage decline from a portfolio's peak value to its subsequent trough before a new peak is established. Unlike metrics that abstract risk into numbers, drawdown is visceral. A 50% drawdown requires a 100% gain just to break even — this is the recovery math that destroys careers. The compounding nature of drawdowns means that a 30% loss followed by another 30% loss on the remaining capital leaves you at 49% of your original balance, not 60%.
In crypto derivatives, where 5-10x leverage is common, drawdowns happen faster than in any traditional market. A 10% adverse move on 5x leverage equals a 50% drawdown. Funded traders on Kingfisher face strict drawdown limits, and understanding exactly where your liquidation cluster sits in the LiqMap can mean the difference between a temporary drawdown and a full account blowup. Maximum drawdown (MDD) is often the only risk metric that gatekeepers — prop firms, allocators, exchanges — actually care about, because it reveals a trader's worst-case behavior, not their average day.
How It Works
The formula is straightforward:
- Drawdown = (Current Value - Peak Value) / Peak Value × 100
- Max Drawdown (MDD) = The largest drawdown sustained over a given period
Compounding recovery math:
| Drawdown | Required Gain to Recover |
|---|---|
| 10% | 11.1% |
| 20% | 25.0% |
| 30% | 42.9% |
| 50% | 100.0% |
| 80% | 400.0% |
Position sizing, stop placement, and correlation awareness are the three tools to control drawdown. Kingfisher's GEX+ and TOF indicators help identify when gamma or options hedging flows can cause sudden, rapid drawdowns across correlated positions.
Why It Matters for Traders
- Survival is paramount. A trader with a 20% maximum drawdown can recover from a losing streak. A trader with an 80% drawdown needs a 400% return — statistically, they're finished. Drawdown limits should be hard stops on your account, not aspirations.
- Drawdown reveals strategy flaws faster than P&L. If your max drawdown is growing across consecutive trades, your edge may have eroded. Track drawdown duration (time underwater) alongside drawdown depth — long drawdown periods indicate regime mismatch.
- Institutional allocators reject high drawdown strategies. Whether you're trading your own capital or seeking funding, MDD over 20% usually disqualifies you. Kingfisher users can track liquidation-level drawdown risk by monitoring where large concentrated positions sit relative to current price.
Common Mistakes
- Averaging down into losing positions. Adding to losers inflates drawdown exponentially. If the thesis hasn't changed, re-enter at a better level — don't pile in while bleeding.
- Ignoring drawdown duration. A 15% drawdown over 3 days is manageable. The same drawdown lasting 6 months signals a strategy that's out of sync with the market regime.
- Treating drawdown as a trailing problem. Many traders tighten stops after a drawdown, only to get shaken out of the recovery. Drawdown-based position sizing should be pre-planned, not reactive.
FAQ
Q: What's a "normal" drawdown for a profitable trader? A: Professional crypto traders typically maintain max drawdowns between 10-25%. Anything above 30% indicates poor risk management regardless of profitability. The best traders have MDDs under 15% with Sharpe ratios above 1.5.
Q: How do I recover from a deep drawdown? A: Reduce position size by 50-75% until you string together 5-10 profitable trades, proving your edge is still intact. Do not increase size to "make it back faster" — this is how drawdowns become terminal.
Deep Dive
Want to explore further? Check out:
- Position Size Calculator & Risk Management Guide for Crypto Traders
- Trading Psychology Masterclass: Emotion Control for Crypto Traders 2026
- Leverage Trading Crypto: Complete Guide to Margin Trading 2026
- How to Stop Getting Liquidated Before Major Moves

