So I've been on a really rough losing streak the past three weeks and my bankroll is down like 40% from where it was at the beginning of the month. I know everyone says you need good bankroll management but when you're losing this much it's really hard to know what to do.
Part of me wants to just take a break completely and stop betting until I can rebuild my account. But another part of me feels like I need to keep betting to try to win back what I lost. I've been betting slightly bigger trying to get back to even faster but that's probably making it worse honestly.
How have you guys dealt with bad losing streaks? Do you reduce your bet sizes? Take time off completely? Keep betting normally and trust that variance will even out? I feel kind of lost right now and I don't know if I'm making good decisions or if I'm tilting.
I know I should have been betting smaller units to begin with. But I'm already in this hole so what's the best way to dig myself out without making it worse?
Princess I'm going to be direct because this is important. You're doing exactly the wrong thing by betting bigger to try to win back your losses. That's called chasing and it's how people go completely broke. You need to stop that immediately.
Let me explain the proper way to handle a losing streak from a bankroll management perspective. When your bankroll decreases by 40%, your unit size needs to decrease proportionally. If you were betting $50 per unit before and your bankroll has dropped 40%, your new unit size should be $30. Not $75 trying to get back to even faster. Not even $50 continuing at your old level. It needs to be $30 or less.
The reason is mathematical. Proper bankroll management dictates that your unit size should be a fixed percentage of your current bankroll, typically 1% to 2%. If your bankroll goes down, your units go down. If your bankroll goes up, your units go up. This is the only way to ensure you don't go completely broke during inevitable losing streaks.
Here's what most people don't understand about variance. Losing streaks of 10, 15, even 20 bets are completely normal even if you have a genuine edge. I've tracked my bets for over 20 years and I've had multiple stretches where I lost 12 of 15 bets despite doing everything correctly. That's just variance. The key is surviving those streaks without destroying your bankroll so you can continue betting when variance swings back positive.
When you increase your bet sizes during a losing streak you're doing the exact opposite of what you should do. You're risking more money during a period where you've already lost significant capital. This is how people turn a manageable 40% drawdown into a complete wipeout.
The correct response to a losing streak is first, reduce your unit sizes proportionally to your reduced bankroll. Second, continue making the same quality bets you were making before. Don't change your handicapping process or start forcing plays. Third, track every bet meticulously to identify if you're actually doing something wrong or if this is just variance.
If after reviewing your process you determine you're making the same quality decisions you were making during winning periods, then it's just variance and you need to wait it out with proper bankroll management. If you identify mistakes in your process, fix those mistakes but still maintain proper unit sizing.
Taking a break is a reasonable option if you're emotionally compromised and can't bet rationally. But you shouldn't take a break just because you're losing. Losing streaks are part of the game. If you take a break every time you hit variance you'll never be in action when the variance swings back positive.
The harsh reality is that if a 40% drawdown has you considering chasing losses or taking big swings, you were probably betting too large to begin with. With proper bankroll management a 40% drawdown should be uncomfortable but survivable. If it's causing you to tilt and make irrational decisions, your risk tolerance doesn't match your unit sizing.