Imagine two traders: the first wins 70% of their trades, the second wins only 40%. Who's profitable at the end of the year? The surprising answer: it might be the second one. The whole secret is in the risk-to-reward ratio.
What Is the Risk-to-Reward Ratio?
It's simply: how much you risk versus how much you expect to gain on the trade. If you place a stop loss 20 pips away and a target 40 pips away, your ratio is 1:2 (you risk one to make two).
Why Does It Matter So Much?
Because it determines your "breakeven win rate" — the win rate you need just to not lose:
- At 1:1 you need to win more than 50% of your trades.
- At 1:2 you only need to win more than 33%.
- At 1:3 winning just 25% of trades keeps you at breakeven.
The higher the reward relative to the risk, the lower the win rate required of you. This is why professionals focus on "reward quality," not on "how often they win."
A Simple Numerical Example
Suppose you took 10 trades, risking 100 dollars on each at 1:2 (so an expected gain of 200 dollars):
- You lost 6 trades: 6 × (−100) = −600 dollars.
- You won 4 trades: 4 × (+200) = +800 dollars.
- Net: +200 dollars — even though you lost most of your trades.
How Does ForexBro Apply This Principle?
Every signal passes through a risk filter that rejects setups with a weak reward relative to risk. The three targets in each signal are designed to give you flexibility in taking profit while keeping a sensible reward ratio. But in the end, the actual ratio on your account depends on your commitment to the stop loss and on not closing winners early out of fear.
The most common mistake: closing winning trades quickly (out of fear) and letting losers grow (out of hope). This flips your ratio upside down and turns a winning system into a losing one.
The Bottom Line
Don't only ask "how often do I win?" — ask "how much do I make when I win versus how much I lose when I lose?" A disciplined trader with a good reward ratio outperforms a trader with a high win rate who risks randomly. The ratio is the compass — and discipline is what keeps you on course.
Disclaimer: Trading involves risk, and past results do not guarantee future results. This content is educational and is not investment advice.



