How you handle losing streaks determines whether you survive long enough to become a profitable trader.
Drawdown measures the decline in your trading capital from a previous peak to a subsequent trough, expressed as a percentage. If your account was at ₹5,00,000 and then declined to ₹3,50,000 before recovering, you experienced a 30% drawdown. Drawdown is one of the most important metrics for evaluating a trading system's risk profile — perhaps even more important than total returns.
Every trading strategy, no matter how well-designed, will experience drawdowns. They are an inevitable and normal part of trading. The goal is not to eliminate drawdowns entirely — that's impossible — but to limit their size and duration so that you can psychologically and financially survive them. A strategy with 25% annual returns but 50% maximum drawdown is essentially unusable, because almost no trader can stomach losing half their capital and continue trading the same system with discipline.
In the Indian market context, drawdowns can be particularly severe and fast-moving. Nifty fell 38% in just 5 weeks during the COVID-19 crash of February–March 2020. Bank Nifty, with higher beta, fell over 50% in the same period. Options sellers who were short puts without hedges were wiped out instantly. Even well-positioned traders saw significant drawdowns simply from the extreme volatility. Having a clear drawdown management framework before entering any position is essential.
There are different types of drawdown to be aware of: maximum drawdown (the worst historical peak-to-trough decline), current drawdown (the decline from the most recent peak to now), and average drawdown (the typical drawdown experienced over a given period). For practical risk management, maximum drawdown is the most critical metric because it tells you the worst case you need to be prepared to survive.
Example: Account peaks at ₹8,00,000, falls to ₹5,60,000
Drawdown = (8,00,000 − 5,60,000) ÷ 8,00,000 × 100 = 30%
Recovery Required: To return to ₹8,00,000 from ₹5,60,000, you need a gain of ₹2,40,000 on a base of ₹5,60,000
Recovery % = 2,40,000 ÷ 5,60,000 × 100 = 42.86% gain required to recover from 30% loss
This is the mathematical reality that most traders don't fully internalize until they experience a severe drawdown firsthand. Due to the asymmetry of percentage gains and losses, recovering from a drawdown requires a proportionally larger gain than the loss itself. The bigger the drawdown, the harder the recovery — and the relationship is not linear, it accelerates dramatically.
| Loss Suffered | Account Value (from ₹10L) | Gain Needed to Recover | Typical Time to Recover |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | ₹9,00,000 | 11.1% | 1–4 weeks |
| 20% | ₹8,00,000 | 25% | 1–3 months |
| 30% | ₹7,00,000 | 42.9% | 3–8 months |
| 40% | ₹6,00,000 | 66.7% | 6–18 months |
| 50% | ₹5,00,000 | 100% | 1–3 years |
| 70% | ₹3,00,000 | 233% | Many years (if ever) |
| 90% | ₹1,00,000 | 900% | Practically impossible |
The table makes the message unmistakably clear: a 50% drawdown requires a 100% gain just to break even. A 70% drawdown requires a 233% gain. This is why capital preservation is not a conservative, cautious approach — it is the only logical approach for long-term survival in the markets. Every rupee of drawdown you prevent is worth far more than a rupee earned, because avoiding a loss requires proportionally less recovery work than earning back a loss.
A short straddle seller had been consistently making ₹15,000/month for 8 months (total ₹1,20,000 profit) on a ₹3,00,000 account.
In a single week in March 2020, Nifty fell 2,000+ points. The short puts were exercised massively. Loss in one week: ₹2,80,000 — nearly the entire account.
To recover from this 93% drawdown, they would need to return 1,300% — roughly 8.5 years of their previous monthly performance, assuming it never happened again.
This is why even highly profitable strategies need drawdown limits and hedges.
Just as NSE has market-wide circuit breakers that halt trading when indices fall by 10%, 15%, or 20%, you need personal circuit breakers — pre-defined rules that trigger automatic changes to your trading behavior when drawdown thresholds are reached. These are not optional guidelines; they are mandatory rules set in advance when you're thinking clearly.
Action: Review all open trades. Reduce position size by 25% for all new trades. Spend at least one day analyzing what went wrong in your journal. Do not add new trades until you've identified the cause of the drawdown.
Action: Reduce position size by 50% on all new trades. Close any trades that have been open for more than twice their planned holding period. Pause all new setup entries for 2–3 days for a full strategy review. Consider reverting to paper trading for one week.
Action: Stop all live trading immediately. Move to paper/virtual trading for a minimum of 2 weeks. Do a complete audit of all losing trades. Identify if this is a strategy failure (market regime change) or an execution failure (not following rules). Do not resume live trading until you've had 2 profitable weeks in paper trading.
Daily loss limit: 2% of total capital. Weekly loss limit: 5% of total capital. If either is hit, stop trading for that day/week. This prevents one bad session from becoming a catastrophic drawdown event.
A drawdown is not merely a financial event — it is a profound psychological one. As your account falls, your confidence falls with it. The fear of losing more becomes so intense that it starts to affect your ability to take valid trades. You become hesitant, second-guess your system, and start making exceptions to your rules. Ironically, this is often the point at which the market begins to recover, and your fearfulness causes you to miss the reversal.
Every trading system in history has had drawdowns, including the most profitable systems run by the world's best traders. Drawdowns are not evidence of a bad system — they are normal statistical variance. Evaluate a strategy by its maximum drawdown relative to returns, and whether drawdowns stay within acceptable limits.
This is one of the most dangerous approaches in trading. Increasing size when your confidence and account are both depleted dramatically increases the risk of a terminal drawdown. Reduce position size during drawdowns. Recovering slowly is infinitely better than losing everything trying to recover quickly.
This is mathematically wrong, as the table in this guide shows. A 30% loss requires a 42.9% gain to recover. Underestimating the recovery required leads traders to take excessive risks with their remaining capital. Always calculate the exact recovery percentage required using the formula: Recovery % = Loss% ÷ (1 − Loss%) × 100.
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