Gold (XAU/USD) Trading Plan: A Structural Framework
A structural trading plan for XAU/USD — point value mechanics, session behavior, news sensitivity, and example funded-account risk parameters.
Gold has ended more funded accounts than most instruments, and rarely because the trader’s analysis was wrong. The account-enders are structural: a lot size copied from forex, a stop placed inside gold’s ordinary noise, a position held through a Fed press conference. XAU/USD rewards traders who respect its mechanics and removes those who do not — usually quickly.
This framework covers what a gold-specific plan must define. The general plan architecture — setups, windows, review — is covered in how to build a trading plan; here we deal only with what gold changes.
The Point Value Structure
Start with the arithmetic, because everything else follows from it. XAU/USD is quoted in US dollars per ounce, to two decimal places. In the convention used by most brokers and calculators:
- One point = 0.1 of the quoted price (e.g., a move from 2,350.00 to 2,350.10)
- One standard lot = 100 ounces, so one point is worth about $10 per standard lot
- A full $1.00 move in the gold price is therefore 10 points — roughly $100 per standard lot
Now put that against gold’s behavior: sessions that travel tens of dollars are unremarkable, which means hundreds of points against a position measured at $10 per point per lot. A single standard lot through a $15 adverse move is $1,500 — on many funded accounts, most or all of a day’s loss allowance in one trade. This is the arithmetic behind the rule that gold demands smaller lots: the range is wide and every point is expensive, so size is the only variable left to control. The position sizing guide covers the general method; the XAU/USD calculator runs gold’s specific numbers, so your plan records the rules rather than re-deriving the math.
Session Behavior: Plan Around the Overlap
Gold trades nearly around the clock, but its liquidity and movement are not evenly distributed:
- Asian session — typically quieter, ranges often compressed; some plans exclude it entirely
- London session — activity builds; the European open frequently sets the day’s first meaningful directional attempt
- London–New York overlap — usually the most active window of the day, with both major centers open and US data landing inside it
- Late New York — liquidity thins after London closes; spreads can widen into the daily close
A disciplined gold plan names its window explicitly — for many intraday traders, the overlap — and treats everything outside it as off-limits. The pre-session checks that make the window tradeable (news times, key levels, current range versus average) are the standard daily trading routine, applied to gold’s clock.
News Sensitivity: The Macro Instrument
Gold is a macro asset wearing a chart. It responds directly to US interest-rate expectations, which makes it acutely sensitive to:
- Federal Reserve communications — rate decisions, press conferences, minutes, and scheduled speeches
- US inflation and employment data — CPI above all, plus NFP and related releases
- Geopolitical developments — risk events can move gold sharply and without calendar warning
The scheduled items belong in your pre-session check with exact times and a written rule: flat through the window, reduced size for the day, or no trading that day. The unscheduled ones are why gold stops must always be real, resting orders — never mental. A mental stop during a geopolitical headline is a donation.
Example Funded-Account Risk Parameters
One internally consistent parameter set for a 100,000-unit funded account with a firm-imposed 5% daily limit. Adapt the values to your own account and data; the structure is the point.
| Parameter | Example value | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Risk per trade | 0.5% ($500 on a 100k account) | Keeps a normal losing streak far from firm thresholds |
| Stop placement | Structure-based, commonly 30–80 points ($3–$8) | Outside routine noise; hard stop in the market, never mental |
| Position size | Derived: $500 ÷ stop points ÷ $10 per point per lot | E.g., a 50-point stop → $500 ÷ 50 ÷ 10 = 1.0 lot equivalent; recalculated every trade |
| Max trades per day | 3 | Limits exposure and revenge sequences |
| Personal daily stop | −1.5% | Wide buffer inside the firm’s 5% — see daily loss limits |
| News rule | Flat through Fed/CPI windows; half risk on release days | Spread widening and gaps make release-time risk unmeasurable |
| Management | Partial at +1R, stop to entry, remainder trailed on structure | Decided before entry, executed without negotiation |
The size row is the one to internalize: lot size is an output of the stop distance, recalculated per trade, never a fixed habit.
Common Gold-Specific Errors
- Forex-sized lots on gold moves. The signature error, mirroring the same mistake on NAS100: familiar size, unfamiliar point value, several times the intended risk.
- Stops inside the noise. A $1–$2 stop on an instrument that routinely oscillates several dollars intraday is a coin flip with commissions.
- Holding through Fed events. Gold’s defining sensitivity. A position through a press conference is an event bet, not a setup.
- Trading the dead hours. Forcing entries in the quiet Asian session because the chart is open is boredom, not edge — a discipline failure the trading window exists to prevent.
- Mental stops. Gold’s headline-driven moves punish them disproportionately; only resting orders count.
Key Takeaways
- Gold’s mechanics are unforgiving: one point (0.1 of price) is worth about $10 per standard lot, and sessions covering hundreds of points are routine.
- Because the range is wide and each point is expensive, lot size must be derived from stop distance every trade — smaller than forex intuition suggests.
- Concentrate the trading window where gold is most active, typically the London–New York overlap, and exclude the dead hours in writing.
- Fed communications, CPI, and geopolitical headlines demand written news rules and real resting stops — never mental ones.
- On funded capital, 0.5% risk per trade with a personal daily stop well inside the firm’s limit keeps an ordinary losing day survivable.