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Lesson 70MT5 systems engineeringAdvanced195 min

Portfolio risk engine: currency exposure, correlation, and equity guards

Move beyond single-trade risk by controlling open exposure, repeated currency bets, correlated positions, daily loss, and account-level kill switches.

Lesson outcomes

  • Calculate portfolio exposure before allowing another trade.
  • Design equity and daily-loss guards for EAs and copy receivers.
  • Avoid stacking the same currency or risk theme across multiple symbols.

Workshop lab

Complete the demo, notebook, platform, or code task before treating the lesson as finished.

Evidence pack

Keep screenshots, exports, logs, calculations, or code versions in a dated learning folder.

Pass standard

You should be able to explain the failure modes, show your work, and name the stop rule.

Free education, not signals. This lesson is part of EarnSouthAfrica's free forex course. It does not tell you what to buy or sell, it does not promise income, and it should be practised on a demo account before any real-money decision.

A trader can risk 1 percent per trade and still build a dangerous account if every trade is the same idea in disguise. EURUSD long, GBPUSD long, AUDUSD long, and USDZAR short may all depend heavily on the US dollar. A portfolio risk engine asks what the account is exposed to, not just whether the next signal looks valid.

This lesson turns risk management into an account-level system suitable for advanced EAs, copiers, and manual review.

What you should be able to do after this lesson

  • Calculate portfolio exposure before allowing another trade.
  • Design equity and daily-loss guards for EAs and copy receivers.
  • Avoid stacking the same currency or risk theme across multiple symbols.

Exposure layers

LayerGuardrail
Trade riskRisk at stop as a percent of equity and rand amount.
Symbol exposureMaximum open risk and volume per symbol.
Currency exposureMaximum repeated directional exposure to one currency.
Account exposureDaily loss, weekly loss, max drawdown, equity floor, and kill switch.

Correlation caution

  • Do not assume separate symbols mean separate risk.
  • Group trades by currency, session, strategy, and news driver.
  • Block new trades when open risk is already concentrated.
  • Review losing days by exposure cluster, not only individual ticket outcome.

Equity guard design

An EA should be able to stop itself when equity drawdown, daily realized loss, open risk, or consecutive error count exceeds the plan. A copy receiver needs the same guard locally so a provider cannot override follower survival rules.

Academy-grade study plan

This is the production-thinking layer of the course. A serious MT5 system is not a lucky Expert Advisor; it is a documented machine with account preflight, symbol preflight, event handling, risk gates, order checks, logs, recovery rules, and demo evidence for every assumption.

Course elementWhat you must produce
Primary artifactEA systems engineering dossier
Lesson focusPortfolio risk engine: currency exposure, correlation, and equity guards
Working environmentDemo account, notebook, exported platform data, or local code sandbox. Never live funds for first practice.
Completion standardYou can explain the concept, reproduce the exercise, identify failure modes, and show evidence without relying on a seller's claims.

Instructor workflow

Use this workflow as if an instructor were marking the lesson. The important question is not whether the topic sounds familiar. The question is whether your notes, screenshots, calculations, logs, or code prove that you can apply portfolio risk engine: currency exposure, correlation, and equity guards under controlled conditions.

  • Start every system session by recording account mode, margin mode, symbol specification, trade permissions, spread state, stops level, freeze level, and session/news context.
  • Separate signal logic, position sizing, preflight checks, order submission, trade lifecycle tracking, recovery, and observability so failures can be isolated.
  • Use MT5 and MQL5 events deliberately: OnTick for market updates, OnTimer for scheduled checks, OnTradeTransaction for lifecycle evidence, and OnBookEvent only when market-book data is subscribed and useful.
  • Treat every reject, retcode, skipped trade, stale quote, bad tick, and risk block as useful evidence rather than an annoyance.

Worked case study: The EA refuses to trade for the right reason

A learner runs a demo EA during a volatile session. The signal is true, but the symbol has a widened spread, the requested stop is inside the broker's stop level, and margin would be too tight after the order. A weak bot sends the trade and blames the broker. A professional system logs each preflight result, rejects the order before submission, and records the account state for review.

After reading the scenario, write the decision you would make before checking the suggested workflow above. Then compare your decision with the operating model. The gap between those two answers is the part of the lesson that deserves another demo repetition.

Professional template

Complete this template in your own notebook. A paid course would normally hide this kind of operating document behind worksheets; here it is part of the free lesson.

FieldStandard
Preflight areaAccount mode, symbol specification, margin, stops/freeze level, spread, session, and permission state.
Event handlerOnTick, OnTimer, OnTradeTransaction, OnBookEvent, OnCalculate, or OnTester responsibility.
Safety gateThe exact condition that blocks duplicated, oversized, stale, unfillable, or undocumented trades.
EvidenceJournal/Experts log, tester report, exported settings, screenshots, retcode notes, and review memo.

Failure-mode lab

Paid courses often sell confidence. A serious course teaches you how the idea breaks. Before continuing, test the failure modes below on demo, paper, or code review. If you cannot describe the failure, you are not ready to trust the concept.

  • Sending orders before checking broker symbol rules, account mode, filling policy, margin, and stop-distance constraints.
  • Using OnTick for every responsibility until the EA becomes impossible to debug.
  • Ignoring trade-server retcodes, partial fills, rejects, and asynchronous lifecycle events.
  • Optimizing parameters while the underlying execution and risk engine is still unproven.

Evidence pack and pass standard

Do not mark this lesson complete because you read it. Mark it complete only when you can show the evidence below. Keep the files in a dated folder so your learning history survives platform updates, memory gaps, and sales pressure.

  • A one-page note explaining portfolio risk engine: currency exposure, correlation, and equity guards without sales language or copied definitions.
  • A screenshot, export, calculation, log, or code file that proves the practical work was completed on demo.
  • A written stop rule that says when this topic must not be used with real money.
  • A system preflight table showing pass/fail results for at least three symbols on demo.
  • A log excerpt where the system rejects a tempting but unsafe trade with a clear reason.

Assessment rubric

LevelWhat it looks like
Not readyYou can repeat the vocabulary but cannot complete the demo task, calculate the risk, explain the failure mode, or show evidence.
Course passYou can complete the practical task on demo, explain the decision rules, show evidence, and name the conditions where the idea must not be used.
Strong passYou can teach the concept to someone else, find edge cases, document a rejected example, and improve the template without weakening risk controls.

Advanced homework

  • Create five deliberately bad trade requests and document exactly where each one should be rejected.
  • Build a state diagram for order request, check, send, fill, modification, close, reject, and recovery paths.
  • Run the same EA on a demo hedging account and a demo netting account, then document lifecycle differences.

Practical drill

Do this lesson as a controlled exercise, not as a reason to trade live. Open a demo account or notebook, write the lesson title, and record what you changed, clicked, calculated, or checked. If the lesson includes code, compile it only in a demo environment and keep the original version unchanged so you can compare edits safely.

  • Write a one-paragraph explanation of portfolio risk engine: currency exposure, correlation, and equity guards in your own words.
  • Take one screenshot or note that proves you completed the platform, maths, research, or code task.
  • Record one risk rule that would stop you from using this idea with real money.
  • If anything feels unclear, repeat the lesson before moving to the next module.

How scammers misuse this topic

Scammers often take real concepts and wrap them in urgency. They may use platform jargon, bot screenshots, copied profit charts, or official-sounding language to make a paid offer feel safe. A real concept is not the same as a safe offer. Before paying anyone, ask whether you can verify the provider, reproduce the calculation, test the claim on demo, understand the risk, and walk away without pressure.

Checkpoint before continuing

  • You can identify repeated exposure across multiple symbols.
  • Your system checks account-level risk before approving a new order.
  • Your copy receiver has local equity and exposure guards.

Official references

These lessons are written as free education. When platform features or rules matter, verify against the official source before using real money.

Risk note: leveraged forex and contracts for difference can lose money quickly. EarnSouthAfrica is an educational publisher, not a broker, adviser, signal provider, or money manager.

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