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The Big Idea

When you look at your trading account, you’ll see two important numbers: balance and equity. They sound similar, but they’re not the same thing. Confusing them can trick you into thinking you’re doing better (or worse) than you really are.

Think of it like your wallet and your bank account. Your wallet has the cash you can actually spend right now. Your bank account has your total money. If you’re expecting a paycheck, your future money isn’t in your wallet yet. Same kind of idea.

In trading:

Equity shows what you’d actually have if you closed everything right now. Balance just shows where you stood when all your trades were closed last.


A Simple Example

Let’s walk through this step by step.

You start with a $10,000 account.

They’re the same because you have no open trades.

You open a trade, buying some stock for $1,000. Nothing has happened yet.

The stock moves up. Your open trade is now showing a $200 profit.

See the difference? Balance hasn’t moved because you haven’t closed the trade yet. But equity reflects the reality of what you’d have right now.

You close the trade at $200 profit.

When you have no open trades, balance and equity are always equal.


Why They Can Be Different

The key idea: your balance only updates when trades CLOSE. It doesn’t care what’s happening with open positions. Equity, on the other hand, constantly updates based on the current market prices of your open trades.

Let’s say you have:

Your account situation:

Which number is “real”? Equity. That’s what you actually have. The $10,000 balance is a little bit of a lie if you cashed out right now.


Why This Matters

Problem 1: The “Hope Trade”

Some traders only look at their balance. They keep losing trades open forever, telling themselves, “It’ll come back. My balance is still $10,000!”

But their equity might be $5,000. They’re actually down $5,000 in real terms. They’re just refusing to accept the loss by not closing the trade.

This is called “hope trading” and it’s how accounts die slowly. Equity is reality. Balance is denial.

Problem 2: Fake Wins

The opposite works too. You might have winning open trades. Your balance says $10,000, but your equity is $12,000 because of open profits.

If you celebrate and act like you already have the profits, you’ll be disappointed when the market reverses and those “profits” disappear. Open profits aren’t real until you close the trade.

Problem 3: Margin Calculations

Brokers use EQUITY (not balance) to decide if you’re safe or in trouble. When your equity drops too close to your used margin, you get warnings or margin calls.

If you only watch balance, you might think you’re fine, when really your equity has dropped to dangerous levels.


Other Important Account Numbers

Your trading platform probably shows a few more numbers besides balance and equity. Here’s what they mean.

Used Margin

The money tied up in your current open trades. You can’t use this for new trades until you close the existing ones.

Free Margin

This is your equity minus used margin. It’s the money available for new trades or to absorb losses.

Margin Level

Calculated as (Equity ÷ Used Margin) × 100%. This percentage shows how safe you are. Above 200% is usually fine. Near 100% is getting scary. Below 100% can trigger forced closures.

Floating P/L

Also called “Unrealized P/L.” This is the profit or loss from your open trades. It’s the difference between balance and equity.

Formula: Equity = Balance + Floating P/L


Common Mistakes Beginners Make

Mistake 1: Only Watching Balance

This leads to denial. You ignore losing trades. Equity drops but you keep saying, “My account is fine!” Until the margin call hits.

Mistake 2: Calculating P/L from Balance

Some beginners compute their profit from balance changes only. But this misses all the open trade movement. Always include equity when measuring performance.

Mistake 3: Confusing Equity Gains with Real Gains

You open a trade, it shoots up, your equity soars. You feel rich! Then the trade reverses and your equity drops back. Open profits aren’t real until you lock them in by closing the trade.

Mistake 4: Not Understanding Margin Impact

With leveraged accounts, equity matters WAY more than balance. Margin calls are triggered by equity drops, not balance drops. Watch the right number.


The Big Picture

Balance and equity are like two different mirrors. Balance shows you where you’ve been. Equity shows you where you are RIGHT NOW.

Here’s what to remember:

A smart trader once said: “Your equity tells the truth. Your balance tells a story.” Make sure you’re reading the right one.


Related Terms

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Focus on the process. Trust the stats. Stay consistent.