Crypto Investing Basics: Calculating Profit, Risk, and Portfolio Allocation
A practical guide to cryptocurrency investing fundamentals — understanding profit and loss, position sizing, portfolio allocation, and using calculators to make informed decisions.
Cryptocurrency markets are volatile, 24/7, and globally accessible. For new investors, the combination of jargon, price swings, and FOMO (fear of missing out) makes it easy to make emotional decisions. Understanding the math behind crypto investing — before you risk real money — is the foundation of rational decision-making.
Understanding profit and loss (P&L)
The most fundamental calculation in any investment:
Profit/Loss = (Exit Price − Entry Price) × Quantity − Fees
ROI (%) = (Profit / Total Cost) × 100
Example:
- You buy 0.5 BTC at $60,000 → Total cost = $30,000
- You sell at $75,000 → Exit value = $37,500
- Fees = $50 (entry) + $60 (exit) = $110
- Net profit = $37,500 − $30,000 − $110 = $7,390
- ROI = ($7,390 / $30,000) × 100 = 24.6%
Don't forget fees. Exchange trading fees typically range from 0.05% to 0.5% per trade. On large positions, these compound significantly. Always include fees in your P&L calculations.
Use our Crypto Profit Calculator to calculate your exact profit, loss, and ROI — just enter buy price, sell price, quantity, and fees.
Realized vs. unrealized gains
- Unrealized gain/loss — the paper profit or loss on a position you still hold. It doesn't count until you sell.
- Realized gain/loss — what you actually made when you closed the position. This is what's taxable.
A common mistake: counting unrealized gains as real wealth. Crypto prices can halve in days. The only money you've made is money you've withdrawn.
Position sizing: how much to invest
The most important risk management decision isn't which coin to buy — it's how much to put in.
The percentage rule
Never risk more than 1–5% of your total portfolio on a single trade. This ensures a string of losses doesn't wipe you out.
Portfolio: $10,000
Max risk per trade: 2% = $200
Entry: $50,000 (BTC)
Stop-loss: $45,000 (−10%)
Max position size: $200 / ($50,000 × 10%) = $200 / $5,000 = 0.04 BTC ($2,000)
The Kelly Criterion (simplified)
For longer-term allocations:
Kelly % = Win Rate − (Loss Rate / Reward:Risk Ratio)
If you win 55% of trades and your average win is 2× your average loss:
Kelly % = 0.55 − (0.45 / 2) = 0.55 − 0.225 = 32.5%
In practice, use half-Kelly (16%) to reduce volatility. Kelly assumes your probabilities are accurate — they rarely are in crypto.
Portfolio allocation framework
Crypto should be a portion of a diversified portfolio, not the whole thing. A common framework:
Core / satellite approach
| Allocation | Asset type | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 60–70% | Index funds, bonds | Stable core, steady compounding |
| 15–25% | Individual stocks | Higher return potential |
| 5–15% | Crypto | High risk / high reward |
| 5% | Cash | Liquidity, dry powder |
Within the crypto allocation
| Allocation | Asset | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 50–60% | Bitcoin (BTC) | Highest liquidity, most established |
| 20–30% | Ethereum (ETH) | Smart contract platform |
| 10–20% | Large-cap alts | Diversified exposure |
| 0–10% | High-risk plays | Speculative, can lose 100% |
The more you move toward small-cap altcoins, the more you're speculating rather than investing.
Understanding volatility
Crypto is dramatically more volatile than traditional assets:
| Asset | Typical annual volatility |
|---|---|
| US Treasury bonds | 3–5% |
| S&P 500 | 15–20% |
| Bitcoin | 60–80% |
| Altcoins | 100–200%+ |
This means:
- A 20% daily move in BTC is normal
- A 50% drawdown within a year is common
- An 80%+ crash (bear market) happens roughly every 3–4 years
Only invest what you can afford to lose entirely. This isn't a cliché — crypto has gone to zero before (many coins) and can again.
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA)
Instead of trying to time the market, DCA means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals regardless of price:
Month 1: Buy $200 at $60,000/BTC = 0.00333 BTC
Month 2: Buy $200 at $45,000/BTC = 0.00444 BTC
Month 3: Buy $200 at $55,000/BTC = 0.00364 BTC
Total invested: $600 → 0.01141 BTC → Average price: $52,585/BTC
When the price drops, you buy more coins for the same dollars. DCA eliminates the paralysis of "should I buy now?" and smooths out entry price over time.
Use our Compound Interest Calculator to model how regular DCA contributions grow over time with assumed annual returns.
Tax considerations
In most jurisdictions, crypto is taxed as property:
- Every sale, trade, or use of crypto is a taxable event (including trading BTC for ETH)
- Short-term gains (held < 1 year) taxed as ordinary income
- Long-term gains (held > 1 year) taxed at lower capital gains rates in many countries
- Mining and staking rewards are typically taxed as ordinary income when received
Keep detailed records of every transaction: date, amount, price at time of transaction, fees. This is much easier to maintain in real time than to reconstruct later.
Key metrics to evaluate a crypto project
Beyond price, evaluate:
| Metric | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Market cap | Current total value = price × circulating supply |
| FDV (Fully Diluted Valuation) | Market cap if all tokens were in circulation |
| 24h volume / market cap | Liquidity ratio; low = illiquid |
| Active addresses | On-chain usage; growing = adoption |
| TVL (Total Value Locked) | For DeFi — how much capital is deployed |
| Developer activity | GitHub commits; inactive = dead project |
A project with high FDV and low market cap means most tokens haven't been released yet — future supply will dilute early investors.
Return on investment planning
Before any investment, model the outcome:
- Target return: What price does BTC need to hit for me to 2× my money?
- Downside scenario: Can I afford to lose 50%? 80%? 100%?
- Time horizon: When do I need this money back?
Use our ROI Calculator to model expected returns, and our Budget Planner to make sure crypto speculation never crowds out emergency savings, debt payments, or retirement contributions.
The crypto market rewards patience, discipline, and risk management far more than trading frequency. Define your strategy before you invest — and stick to it when prices move against you.