What is Max Loss Per Day?
Max loss per day is a pre-set rupee or R ceiling — trading stops when hit.
Indian market context (NSE)
Reference levels: Nifty 50 at 24,300, Reliance Industries at ₹1,300, Bank Nifty futures at 55,000 (lot size 30). Examples below show how Max Loss Per Day shows up on Indian index, equity, and futures books — update to live quotes in your journal.
Nifty 50 perspective
Max Loss Per Day on Nifty (24,300): define rupee risk per trade before the 9:15 open; index gaps on global cues can skip planned max loss per day levels — use exchange-supported stop types and size for gap beyond stop.
Reliance Industries perspective
Max Loss Per Day for Reliance (₹1,300): stock circuits and 20% band limits can trap positions past your planned exit; keep max loss per day outside circuit freeze zones where possible.
Bank Nifty futures perspective
Max Loss Per Day on Bank Nifty (55,000): span margin changes intraday — a valid max loss per day at entry may be too large after a margin hike; recheck buying power before adding lots.
How to validate
- Minimum sample: 30 closed trades on one strategy tag before trusting Max Loss Per Day.
- Check for one outlier week inflating Max Loss Per Day — export largest winners and losers.
- Recompute Max Loss Per Day after including brokerage, STT, and slippage on F&O tags.
- Compare Max Loss Per Day on the same date range as profit factor and max drawdown.
How to track in TradeLyser
- Open Strategy Board or analytics → filter by strategy tag and review period.
- Locate the widget or column reporting Max Loss Per Day (or export trades to compute manually).
- Store snapshot values in weekly review: Max Loss Per Day, profit factor, drawdown, trade count.
- If Max Loss Per Day is custom, add a spreadsheet column fed from TradeLyser CSV export.
Best practices
- Publish Max Loss Per Day per strategy, not only at account level.
- Use the same calculation window (weekly vs monthly) year-round.
- Pair Max Loss Per Day with sample size in every review slide or note.
- Document formula used so mentors interpret the same number.
Common pitfalls
- Changing rules after fewer than 20 trades because Max Loss Per Day moved slightly.
- Mixing intraday and positional tags when computing Max Loss Per Day.
- Ignoring costs so Max Loss Per Day looks better than banked P&L.
- Letting one outlier trade dominate the Max Loss Per Day reading.
How to use this in TradeLyser
Set cap in trading plan; log halt days and next-session size rule in journal.
Related terms
Drawdown at any moment is the gap between your latest equity peak and today’s equity. Max drawdown is the largest such gap over a period.
Revenge trading is increasing size, frequency, or randomness immediately after a loss to “get back” at the market — usually breaking the playbook.
Risk per trade is the planned loss at your stop — not the notional value of the position. A ₹10 lakh notional trade might risk only ₹3,000.
Discipline is repeatable adherence to entries, exits, size, and pause rules — especially after wins and losses.
FAQ
Pause or stop for day at cap?
Define before session — sim-only or flat is common.
Cap as % equity or fixed ₹?
% equity scales with account; fixed ₹ is simpler early on.
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