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Understanding Risk Scores in Social Trading

Updated over 3 months ago

When evaluating strategies in FXTRADING.com's social trading platform, the risk score is a crucial metric that helps you assess potential risk before investing. This article explains how risk scores work and what they mean for your investment decisions.

What is the Risk Score?

The risk score is a numerical indicator displayed for Social Standard and Social Pro accounts that reflects the level of risk associated with a strategy. It primarily considers the strategy's free margin—the lower the free margin, the higher the risk of a stop out occurring, resulting in a higher risk score.

Note: Risk scores are not available for Professional accounts.

Risk Score Categories

Risk scores range from 1 to 10 and are categorized into three levels:

Risk Score

Level

Description

1-5

Moderate

Low probability of losing all capital in the short term

6-8

High

Requires caution; investors should accept responsibility for potential losses

9-10*

Extra High

Extreme caution advised; only invest capital you can afford to lose

*Important: Strategies with Extra High risk (9-10) are hidden by default and only visible to investors who specifically set their filters to "All" when browsing strategies.

How Risk Scores are Calculated

The risk score displayed for a strategy represents the highest risk level reached during that day. The system calculates risk scores every minute, updating the displayed score only when a higher value is detected.

A Signal Provider can improve their strategy's risk score by consistently using a smaller portion of the strategy's capital for trading over a 30-day period.

Risk Score vs. Drawdown

While drawdown shows historical performance (what has already happened), the risk score attempts to predict future vulnerability. A risk score of 6 or higher indicates significant risk, with higher scores suggesting lower free margin and greater vulnerability to market fluctuations.

Any strategy that reaches a risk score of 9 or above is automatically hidden from standard search results to protect potential investors from extremely high-risk options.

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