Definitely! A reward to risk ratio helps traders manage the risk of losing money. Your risk should be lesser than your reward for a trade to be worth it.
That’s an important skill to have in you when you are trading forex. The market is always moving and currency prices keep changing. You are always in a dilemma of your trades working and not working. But with money management, you get the strength to do the right thing at the right time. You will never take risks that you can’t afford.
money management sometimes fail to work . because market is too much volatile and no one can predict the market with certainly.
Managing risk is more important than making profits in forex. Traders should not get greedy and forget the risks that are involved in forex. They should use risk management rationally with any influence of any emotion.
Risk is part of trading, sometimes inevitable, here risk management is one way to manage the risk, although not protecting the risk, trading-based risk management ideally will amplify more opportunities to make new trades.
Money management is very important in forex trading. It is a defensive strategy that is meant to preserve capital. Successful money management can save you from draining your account when you hit a bad streak of losing trades.
successful money management comes from perfect trading knowledge and experience which is really rare and expensive.
Money management equates with position sizing. Most traditional - fixed fractional, where you risk a percentage of your trading capital on one trade. 1 - 2% is a typical recommendation. Then there is Kelly formula, which estimates the fraction of the capital you can risk according to the results of backtest. There is also Fixed Ratio, which I think is most useful for small accounts. Couple of more - Dynamic Position Sizing (developed by one Czech trader, forgot his name). In DPS you size the trade according to the stats of backtest as well: if the trade has a higher probability of winning you put more size, and vice versa. It is useful if you trade the strategy with different inputs. For example, a breakout of 10 bars has 40% probability of being successful, breakout of 30 bars - 55%. So you put one lot at 40 bar breakout, and two more lots if it is followed by a 30 bar break. That's the idea, obviously the details depend on actual numbers. After rereading my post I realize it may have come out a little basic. Apologies if I am stating the obvious. I like playing the Guru.