Dynamic Drawdown is a drawdown model where the maximum allowed loss adjusts as the account balance or equity increases. As a trader makes profits, the drawdown threshold moves upward to lock in gains and reduce downside risk. This type of drawdown is often referred to as trailing drawdown and is commonly used in prop trading programs.
Unlike fixed drawdown models, dynamic drawdown does not stay at a single level. It changes based on the account’s highest recorded value, which makes ongoing risk control more strict as profits grow.
Why Dynamic Drawdown Matters in Prop Trading
Dynamic drawdown rewards traders who grow their accounts steadily while protecting the firm’s capital. As profits increase, traders must maintain discipline since losses can no longer return to the original starting balance. This encourages consistent execution rather than aggressive profit chasing.
Traders who understand dynamic drawdown can plan exits and position sizing more effectively. Since the drawdown tightens as the account grows, holding large floating losses becomes riskier. Knowing how the trailing level is calculated helps traders avoid accidental breaches during profitable periods.
Example of Dynamic Drawdown
A trader starts with a 100000 account and a dynamic drawdown set at 5%. If the account reaches a peak equity of 110000, the drawdown threshold moves up to 104500. If the equity later falls below this level, the account is breached even though it remains above the starting balance.