The decision that comes before strategy
Long before you think about edge, odds or sizing, there is a more fundamental question: which of your money is even allowed to be at risk? Most blow-ups do not come from a bad strategy. They come from never drawing that line — from a portfolio that quietly bleeds into rent, savings and the money you actually need to live.
What a true bankroll is
A bankroll is a deliberately separated pool of capital you have decided you can afford to lose entirely without it changing your life. It is not your emergency fund, not next month's rent, not money earmarked for a goal. It is risk capital — and the act of defining it, in a number, in a separate place, is what turns reckless gambling into bounded investing.
Why separation protects your judgement
When a position is funded by money you need, every swing is an emotional emergency, and emotion is exactly what destroys edges. A ring-fenced bankroll lets a normal losing streak stay a non-event: uncomfortable, but never threatening. That emotional buffer is the hidden reason separation matters — it keeps fear and desperation out of your decisions.
How to set it up in practice
Pick an amount you could lose entirely with a shrug, and keep it in its own account, mentally and ideally literally separate from your everyday money. Never top it up impulsively from living funds after a loss, and only withdraw on a deliberate schedule, not on emotion. The wall between bankroll and life savings should be boring, fixed, and respected even — especially — when a run tempts you to breach it.