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Profit is the foundation of systematic trading: a complete guide to calculations
Traders often face a dilemma: when to exit a trade? Profit isn’t just a desire to earn more—it’s a specific plan of action you set before entering a position. It’s your target profit level at which you close the order and lock in your gains. Without this plan, it’s easy to miss out on potential income or wait indefinitely.
Profit is not intuition but a mathematical calculation
Profit is a fundamental risk management tool based on simple math. Many beginners make a critical mistake—they buy a coin and hope it “grows on its own.” The predictable result: the trade drags on for weeks or months, funds are frozen, and psychology is tested.
The correct approach is to plan ahead. Here’s the basic formula:
Target Price = Entry Price × (1 + Profit Percentage / 100)
This formula clearly defines the price at which to place a sell order. For example, if you entered at 1.000 USDT and want to earn 0.5%, the target price will be 1.000 × 1.005 = 1.005 USDT.
How to correctly calculate the target price considering fees
Here’s the first pitfall. Exchange fees are usually 0.1% for entry and 0.1% for exit, totaling 0.2%. This means that even if the coin rises by 0.2%, you’ll break even.
Therefore, profit should be higher than 0.2% to at least cover costs. If you set a profit at 0.5%, the net profit after fees will be about 0.3%.
Let’s look at a practical example. Suppose you bought a coin at 0.328 USDT and plan to make a 0.6% profit:
What profit level to choose for different situations
The optimal profit depends on the coin’s volatility and your trading strategy:
If the coin is low volatility and you want to avoid hanging—set profit in the range of 0.3–0.6%. This allows you to lock in small, frequent profits and steadily grow your portfolio.
When the coin shows high volatility—allow for profit targets of 0.7–1.0%. These levels give more room for price fluctuations.
Profit above 1.5% is high-risk zone. The market may not reach such a target, especially if the overall trend is sideways or downward. You risk being in loss for several days waiting for a move that may not happen.
Common mistakes in miscalculating profit
Too low profit (less than 0.2%) won’t even cover fees—you’ll lose money on each trade.
Too high profit (more than 2%) means waiting weeks for the target price, capital is frozen, and opportunities are missed.
No calculations at all—it’s like traveling in an unfamiliar city without a navigator. You might end up anywhere except your destination.
A systematic approach to trading
Key rule: it’s better to make five trades with 0.5% profit each (total 2.5%) than chase one big trade at 5% that you never get. Trading isn’t gambling; it’s applied mathematics.
Before each trade, spend 30 seconds on calculation. Don’t guess “by eye,” use the formula. Profit is a tool that separates systematic traders from emotional players. It’s the difference between steady income and random results.