Lesson Learned: Gold Breakout and Sizing
Thought I'd share a recent painful lesson on a gold breakout that went south, primarily due to sizing. Back in February, when $XAUUSD was consolidating around the $2030-2040 area, I was convinced a move higher was imminent, seeing the technical setup and general macro backdrop for inflation hedges. My initial entry was fine, a small probe long right at the bottom of the range.
The mistake came when it actually broke out convincingly above $2060. Instead of adding incrementally, I went heavy, seeing it as confirmation. It felt like the move. Market ripped higher to $2100+, and I was feeling good. But then it pulled back, not just a little, but aggressively. My stop was hit for a significant loss because the position size was simply too large for that kind of volatility. Had I kept the initial small position, or scaled in more judiciously, the drawdown would have been manageable, and I might have even re-entered at better levels later. It's a classic case of letting confirmation bias override proper risk management and position sizing. The lesson, again, is that even when you're 'right' on direction, poor sizing can turn a winner into a loser quickly.