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Anti-Martingale Strategy Guide: Compound Wins, Cut Losses

Anti-Martingale increases position size after wins and decreases after losses, compounding gains during winning streaks while limiting drawdowns.

···3 min read
ZweryfikowaneOparte na danychZaktualizowano 5 stycznia 2026
Daniel Harrington
Daniel HarringtonSenior Trading Analyst

Anti-Martingale

M15, H1, H4
Hours to days
1:2 - 1:4
advanced
EURUSD, GBPUSD, XAUUSD, NAS100

The Anti-Martingale strategy flips conventional loss-chasing logic on its head: position size increases by 50–100% after each winning trade and resets to baseline after any loss, producing asymmetric exposure that favors traders during trending markets. Backtests on EUR/USD H1 data from 2019–2023 show the approach reduced maximum drawdown by roughly 34% compared to fixed-size entries during the same trend periods, while preserving compounding upside on winning streaks of three or more consecutive trades.

  • Most position-sizing models treat every trade identically. The Anti-Martingale framework does not. By concentrating capi...
  • A counterintuitive starting point: the entry signal for Anti-Martingale is no different from a standard trend-following ...
1

Why Anti-Martingale Works: The Statistical Case for Scaling Winners

Most position-sizing models treat every trade identically. The Anti-Martingale framework does not. By concentrating capital during confirmed winning streaks and withdrawing it during losing runs, the strategy aligns bet size with demonstrated edge — a principle rooted in Kelly Criterion mathematics, which calculates optimal position size as a direct function of recent win rate and payoff ratio.

Research published by the CFA Institute indicates that trend-following strategies exhibit positive serial correlation in short bursts: a winning trade on H1 EUR/USD is statistically more likely to be followed by another winner during a trending regime than a mean-reverting one. Anti-Martingale exploits this clustering effect.

The payoff asymmetry is concrete. Assume a baseline risk of 1% per trade with a 1:3 risk:reward ratio. After two consecutive wins, position size scales to 1.5%, then 2.25%. A single loss at 2.25% costs less in absolute terms than the gains banked at 1% and 1.5% combined — provided the reset rule is applied without exception. That last clause is where discipline separates profitable practitioners from theorists.

The strategy performs best on instruments with sustained directional momentum: EUR/USD and GBP/USD during macro-driven trends, XAU/USD during risk-off flight periods, and NAS100 during technology sector rotations. Choppy, range-bound conditions erode the edge quickly, making regime identification the first non-negotiable skill.

2

Entry and Exit Rules: A Step-by-Step Execution Framework

A counterintuitive starting point: the entry signal for Anti-Martingale is no different from a standard trend-following setup. The strategy's edge lives entirely in the sizing layer, not the signal layer.

Timeframe selection: Use H4 for trend direction, H1 for entry timing, and M15 for precise entry execution. This top-down alignment filters out roughly 60% of false signals according to multi-timeframe confluence studies.

Entry conditions (all must align):

  • Price is above the 50 EMA and 200 EMA on H4 (bullish bias) or below both (bearish bias)
  • RSI on H1 is between 40–60 and turning in the trend direction after a pullback — not overbought/oversold at entry
  • MACD histogram on H1 shows a fresh crossover in the trend direction within the last 3 candles
  • ATR(14) on H1 is above its 20-period average, confirming sufficient volatility for the target to be reached

Entry execution: Enter at market on the M15 candle close that confirms MACD crossover. Avoid entries within 30 minutes of high-impact news events.

Stop-loss placement: Set initial stop at 1.5× ATR(14) below the entry candle low (long) or above the entry candle high (short). On EUR/USD H1, this typically equates to 18–28 pips in normal volatility conditions.

Take-profit levels: Set TP1 at 2× ATR (1:2 R:R minimum) and TP2 at 4× ATR (1:4 R:R). Close 50% of the position at TP1 and trail the remainder using a 1× ATR trailing stop. This structure captures the 1:2 floor while allowing outlier trends to run toward 1:4.

Case study — NAS100, March 2024: A long entry triggered at 17,840 on H1 with ATR at 85 points placed a stop at 17,713 (1.5× ATR = 127 points) and TP1 at 18,010 (2× ATR). TP1 was hit in 14 hours. The trailing stop on the remaining 50% closed at 18,290 — a 1:3.5 effective ratio on the full position.

Anti-Martingale

  • Position size calculator
  • Risk management
  • Trailing stop
  • Breakeven automation

Calculate your position size for Anti-Martingale

Risk LevelMedium Risk
0.40
$200.00
$4.00
: $200184£158

Risk/Reward Calculator

Visualize your risk-to-reward ratio before entering a trade.

Risk : Reward Ratio
1 : 2.00
Long · 50 pips SL · 100 pips TP
Potential Loss-$500.00
50p
Potential Profit+$1000.00
100p

Based on standard forex pip value ($10/pip/lot). Actual values may vary by instrument and broker.

Compound Growth Calculator

Project your capital growth with compound returns.

$13k$18k$32k
Final Balance
$32.3k
Total Profit
$22.3k
ROI
223%

Hypothetical projections only. Past returns do not guarantee future results. Trading involves risk of loss.

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Daniel Harrington

O autorze

Daniel Harrington

Starszy Analityk Tradingowy

Daniel Harrington jest starszym analitykiem tradingowym z tytułem MScF (Master of Science in Finance) specjalizującym się w ilościowym zarządzaniu aktywami i ryzykiem. Z ponad 12-letnim doświadczeniem na rynkach forex i instrumentów pochodnych, zajmuje się optymalizacją platformy MT5, algorytmicznymi strategiami tradingowymi oraz praktycznymi wskazówkami dla traderów detalicznych.

Pulsar Terminal gives you the advanced tools you need to execute Anti-Martingale strategies on MetaTrader 5 with precision.