The position-sizing framework: 1-2-5 rule. Allocate no more than 1% of portfolio to any single low-conviction speculative options trade, 2% to high-conviction directional bets, 5% to defined-risk income strategies on quality underlyings (cash-secured puts, covered calls on large-caps). Maximum total options exposure: 25% of portfolio. Maximum single underlying exposure: 10% of portfolio across all positions. These numbers seem conservative but match the empirical survival rate of retail options traders.
Why position-sizing is the #1 risk factor
The mathematics: even a 70% win rate strategy can blow up if losses are 4× the average win.
| Win rate | Win/loss ratio | Long-term outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 70% | 1:1 | Positive expectancy |
| 70% | 1:4 (loss is 4× win) | NEGATIVE expectancy |
| 50% | 2:1 (win is 2× loss) | Positive expectancy |
| 30% | 5:1 | Positive expectancy |
Position-sizing controls the win-to-loss size ratio. If you let losers run to -100% (-£500 on a £500 premium) and cap winners at +50% (+£250 on a £500 long position), even 60% win rate is losing.
The 1-2-5 rule for UK retail
1% — speculative directional bets
Out-of-the-money long calls/puts, lottery-ticket trades on individual stock moves, biotech/earnings plays. Maximum 1% of portfolio. For a £50,000 portfolio, that's £500 per trade.
2% — high-conviction directional bets
In-the-money calls/puts with clear thesis, hedges for existing positions, defined-risk spreads on high-conviction ideas. Maximum 2% of portfolio. For a £50,000 portfolio, that's £1,000 per trade.
5% — defined-risk income strategies on quality underlyings
Cash-secured puts on large-caps you're happy to own, covered calls on existing positions, iron condors on liquid indices. Maximum 5% of portfolio. For a £50,000 portfolio, that's £2,500 of cash collateral OR £2,500 of premium at risk per trade.
Portfolio-level limits
- Maximum total options exposure: 25% of portfolio. If your portfolio is £50,000, max £12,500 deployed across all options positions at any time.
- Maximum single underlying: 10% of portfolio. Don't have £8,000 of AAPL exposure across calls, puts, and shares.
- Maximum correlated exposure: 15% of portfolio. Tech stocks correlate with each other — limit total tech-options exposure regardless of individual position sizes.
- Maximum cash collateral: Sufficient for all open cash-secured puts AT THE STRIKE. If you have 5 cash-secured puts each requiring £5,000 of collateral, you need £25,000 of cash sitting in the broker.
Worked example — sizing a portfolio
£50,000 portfolio building options exposure
| Strategy | Allocation | Position size |
|---|---|---|
| Cash-secured put on AAPL (£175 strike) | 5% | £2,500 of premium-at-risk |
| Cash-secured put on MSFT (£300 strike) | 5% | £2,500 |
| Covered call on existing SPY position | 3% | £1,500 |
| Long FTSE 100 put for hedging | 2% | £1,000 |
| Speculative NVDA earnings call | 1% | £500 |
| Long-dated TSLA call (high-conviction directional) | 2% | £1,000 |
| Total options exposure | 18% | £9,000 |
This is a sustainable level. If 4 of these 6 trades go to maximum loss (a catastrophic month), the portfolio loss is ~£4,500 (9% of capital). Recoverable.
Now consider the alternative: a single £20,000 long call (40% of portfolio) on a 5-week earnings bet. One bad earnings = £20,000 loss = 40% of portfolio gone. Catastrophic.
The maximum-loss rule
For every position, before opening:
- Calculate maximum loss in pounds. For long calls/puts: the premium paid. For sold puts: strike × 100 minus premium received. For spreads: width of spread × 100 minus credit.
- Compare to portfolio. Is the maximum loss above 5% of portfolio? Don't open.
- Set a stop. If you'll close at -50% of premium, what's the actual GBP loss at that point? Make sure it's tolerable.
The losing streak survival framework
Even with positive expectancy, losing streaks happen. A 5-trade losing streak at -100% each on 5% positions = 25% portfolio drawdown. Survivable. The same streak on 20% positions = portfolio destroyed.
Mathematical fact: at 60% win rate, a 5-loss streak is ~1% probability — happens every 100 trades. Plan for it.
Drawdown rule: if your options portfolio is down 20% from peak, reduce all position sizes by 50% for the next 10 trades. Re-evaluate after.
The cash reserve
Always hold at least 25% of your total portfolio in cash, even if you're heavily options-active. The cash serves three functions:
- Collateral for unexpected assignments on cash-secured puts.
- Margin for sold positions (if a put position moves against you, additional margin may be required).
- Opportunity capital — when markets crash and IV spikes, premium-selling becomes lucrative. You need cash to deploy.
Common position-sizing mistakes
- Doubling down on losers. Adding to a losing position to "average down" multiplies your loss when wrong. Don't.
- Over-leveraging via spreads. A £100 wide spread = £100 max loss per contract. 10 contracts = £1,000 risk. Easy to over-deploy.
- Ignoring overnight gaps. Stop-loss orders don't work overnight. A 20% gap-down on Friday morning can blow through any stop.
- Forgetting margin calls. Selling options requires margin. Adverse moves can force you to deposit cash mid-trade.
Sources and methodology
The 1-2-5 framework reflects standard retail options risk management. Win-rate / win-loss ratio mathematics are well-established. For personalised investment advice, an FCA-authorised IFA is required (UK Tax Drag is educational only). See the tax adviser editorial recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.
Related options guides
How UK Tax Drag holds itself to account
Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.