Binomial process trading (BPT) is the term used by Rocket Science Trading for a trading risk-management framework in which each trade is structured to have a predefined loss amount, a predefined win amount, and a fixed risk/reward ratio. The purpose is to reduce trading outcomes to a controlled sequence of wins and losses rather than a variable set of uncontrolled gains, losses, partial exits, and discretionary adjustments.
BPT attempts to make trading behave more like a binomial process: each trade is either a win or a loss, and the size of those outcomes is controlled before the trade is entered. The term was introduced to describe this specific fixed-outcome approach to trade structuring and performance measurement. This does not make trading risk-free. It also does not guarantee profitability. It creates a measurable structure in which win rate, risk/reward ratio, risk size, and sample size can be evaluated directly.
The break-even starting point
At an equal fixed risk/reward ratio, BPT is designed so that a trader who goes long or short completely at random should approach break-even over a large enough sample before commissions, slippage, and fees. After trading costs, the expected result is slightly negative. That boundary condition is important: the structure starts from mathematical break-even rather than from the common retail pattern of near-certain bankruptcy due to uncontrolled trading.
Some studies of retail day-trading accounts have found that nearly all individual traders lose money or stop trading over time, with failure rates reported near 99% in the most severe samples. BPT was developed from the opposite premise. If even a random trader—or, less charitably, a cat pressing long and short buttons—can approach break-even when the win amount, loss amount, position size, and exits are fixed, then the human trader’s job is not to predict every market turn. The job is to acquire a small edge: a few additional percentage points of win rate, enough to overcome commissions, slippage, and fees.
The controls needed to enforce that boundary also make the method simple. With fixed risk, fixed reward, predefined exits, and consistent sizing, there are fewer moving parts. That makes the system easier to diagnose and improve. If results degrade, the trader can look at win rate, execution cost, discipline, and setup quality without also untangling constantly changing trade size or exit behavior.
Summary
Binomial process trading is based on four main controls:
- fixed win/loss amounts;
- fixed risk/reward ratio;
- pre-defined exit prices
These controls are intended to limit the main failure mode of many retail trading approaches: allowing trade size, exit behavior, and loss magnitude to vary from trade to trade. When the win and loss amounts are controlled, the trader can evaluate performance using win rate, risk/reward ratio, expected value, drawdown, and probability of losing streaks.
Why the term “binomial” is used
A binomial process has two possible outcomes for each trial. In trading terms, the desired structure is:
- win a defined amount; or
- lose a defined amount.
The trade result is not judged by how the chart looked, how stressful the trade felt, or how much the trader adjusted the position after entry. The result is judged by whether the trade reached the predetermined win or loss condition.
This is similar in structure to repeated trials such as coin flips, although trading is not random in the same way. The point is not that markets are coin flips. The point is that a trader can impose a consistent measurement framework on trading outcomes.
Relationship to The RST Way
The RST Way is Rocket Science Trading’s implementation of binomial process trading for day trading. It uses predefined risk, predefined exits, and share sizing to keep trade outcomes controlled. The approach is described in more detail in Chapter 8, “The RST Way”, and Chapter 9, “Trader Profitability”, of How to Day Trade Like a Rocket Scientist with Binomial Process Trading.
The RST Way assumes that uncontrolled trading creates too much variation to assess performance cleanly. If a trader changes share size, exits manually, adds to losing positions, removes partial size unpredictably, or moves stops without a defined rule, the result is no longer a controlled sequence of comparable trials.
Core variables
The main variables in binomial process trading are:
| Variable | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Risk size | Percentage of equity that can be lost on a trade if the planned loss exit is reached. |
| Win amount | The planned profit amount if the trade reaches the win exit. |
| Risk/reward ratio | The relationship between the predefined loss and predefined win. |
| Win rate | The percentage of trades that reach the win exit. |
| Sample size | The number of completed trades used to evaluate the system. |
| Drawdown | The decline in account value during losing streaks or unfavorable sequences. |
These variables are connected. A system with a larger reward relative to risk can tolerate a lower win rate. A system with a smaller reward relative to risk requires a higher win rate. Increasing risk size may increase returns, but it also increases drawdown and the risk of account damage during losing streaks.
What BPT does and does not claim
BPT is a risk-management and measurement framework. It does not claim that any trader can predict markets reliably. It also does not remove the need for a trade playbook, execution discipline, or enough trades to evaluate results.
BPT can help a trader determine whether a strategy is working because the outcomes are comparable. It does not make a poor trading strategy profitable by itself. If the trader cannot achieve a sufficient win rate for the selected risk/reward ratio after commissions, fees, slippage, and spread, the system will not be profitable.
Why BPT matters for trader profitability
Many traders lose money not only because their market reads are wrong, but because their risk is inconsistent. A single oversized loss can erase many normal wins. A long losing streak can damage an account if the risk size is too large. A trader who changes exits during the trade may not know whether the original strategy worked.
BPT addresses this by forcing the trader to define the trade outcome before entry. This makes it possible to analyze results across a sample of trades rather than overreacting to individual wins or losses.
Related reading
FAQ
Is binomial process trading a trading strategy?
BPT is primarily a risk-management and measurement framework. A trader still needs a trade playbook or entry method. BPT controls how trade outcomes are structured and evaluated.
Does BPT guarantee profitability?
No. Profitability depends on the trader’s win rate, risk/reward ratio, fees, slippage, spread, trade frequency, account size, and ability to execute the system consistently. The point of BPT is to start a trader at breakeven if trading at random (going long or short at any time on any stock). With that safeguard, the trader’s job is add market awareness and timing to nudge the win rate a few points to cover commissions and fees and become profitable.
How is BPT different from normal day trading?
Many day traders vary share size, change exits during the trade, add or remove shares without a defined rule, or judge performance based on short-term results. BPT attempts to control these variables so that performance can be evaluated statistically. The goal is to have well-controlled trading that is straightforward to diagnose and improve. The alternative is a wild roller-coaster ride that inevitably ends in bankruptcy (this is all but a certainty due to phenomena such as Gambler’s Ruin and the reason why 99% of retail day traders are not profitable).