Portfolio riskIntermediate

Capital Allocation

Capital allocation is the decision of how to divide an account across positions, strategies and cash, and done well it distributes risk rather than rupees, so that each bet contributes a controlled and intended share of total portfolio risk.

Quick answer: Capital allocation is the decision of how to divide an account across positions, strategies and cash, and done well it distributes risk rather than rupees, so that each bet contributes a controlled and intended share of total portfolio risk.

In simple words

Capital allocation is how you split your money across your trades, strategies and cash. The beginner mistake is to split rupees equally and assume risk is equal too, but a volatile position and a calm one of the same size carry very different risk. Good allocation shares out risk, not just money, so that no single bet quietly dominates the account. It also decides how much to keep in cash, which is itself a position, and a powerful one in a crisis.

Purpose

This page explains capital allocation as the distribution of risk across a book, contrasts equal-rupee with equal-risk approaches, and shows why cash and reserves are part of the allocation decision.

Visual explanation

Capital Allocation

Capital divided across positions and cash, with slice sizes reflecting intended risk contribution rather than equal rupee amounts.

Portfolio Allocation & Limits18%Position A16%Position B14%Position C12%Position D40%Cash reserve100% of capital — no single position dominatesPer-position limits + a cash reserve cap concentration and tail risk

Professional explanation

Allocation is about risk, not rupees

The core insight of capital allocation is that dividing money equally does not divide risk equally. A position's contribution to portfolio risk depends on its size, its volatility and its correlation with the rest of the book, so an equal-rupee split hands more risk to the more volatile positions. Two positions of Rs 1,00,000 each, one in a calm largecap and one in a volatile smallcap or a leveraged future, are equal in capital but wildly unequal in risk. Sound allocation therefore starts from the risk each position contributes and sizes the rupee amounts to hit an intended risk distribution, not the other way round.

Equal-rupee, equal-risk and risk-parity approaches

Several allocation schemes trade off simplicity against risk-awareness. Equal-rupee allocation splits capital evenly across positions, easy but blind to volatility. Equal-risk allocation sizes each position so it contributes the same risk, typically by giving smaller allocations to more volatile positions, which produces a more balanced book. Risk parity generalises this to size positions inversely to their volatility so each contributes equal risk, and it is the institutional version of the same idea. Each is a rule for translating a view about risk distribution into rupee weights, and the choice depends on how much a trader knows about the volatilities and correlations involved.

Cash as an allocation and an option

Cash is not the absence of a decision but a deliberate allocation with real value. Holding cash lowers gross exposure, reduces the loss in a broad fall, and preserves the ability to act, buying when others are forced to sell, which is why cash behaves like an option on future opportunity. In a leveraged Indian F&O context, unencumbered cash is also the buffer that meets margin calls without forced liquidation. Allocating some capital to cash costs expected return in a rising market but buys survival and optionality in a falling one, and that trade-off is a central allocation choice, not a residual.

At a higher level, capital is allocated not just across positions but across strategies, trend-following, mean-reversion, option-selling, whose returns behave differently in different regimes. Allocating across strategies whose returns are weakly correlated smooths the equity curve, because a strategy struggling in one regime may be offset by another that thrives in it. But this depends on the strategies staying uncorrelated, and in a crisis their correlations can converge just as position correlations do, so strategy-level diversification must be stress-tested the same way. The allocation decision is inseparable from the correlation structure it assumes.

Rebalancing and allocation drift

An allocation is not set once; it drifts as prices move. Winners grow and losers shrink, so a book allocated to intended weights slowly concentrates into whatever has risen, quietly raising concentration and risk beyond the plan. Rebalancing, trimming what has grown and topping up what has shrunk back toward target weights, restores the intended risk distribution and mechanically sells high and buys low. The cost is transaction charges and, in India, STT and taxes on realised gains, so rebalancing is dosed, done on a schedule or when weights drift past a threshold, rather than constantly. Ignoring drift is how a disciplined initial allocation becomes an unintended concentrated bet.

Formula

Risk contribution of position i ≈ wi × σi (scaled by correlation); Equal-risk weight: wi ∝ 1 ÷ σi

wi = capital weight of position i; σi = volatility of position i; the risk contribution combines weight, volatility and correlation with the rest of the book. For an equal-risk (risk-parity) allocation ignoring correlation, set each weight inversely proportional to its volatility, wi ∝ 1 ÷ σi, so a position twice as volatile gets half the capital. This equalises each position's standalone risk contribution; a full treatment adjusts further for the correlation matrix.

Equal-rupee vs equal-risk allocation

AspectEqual-rupeeEqual-risk
SplitsMoney evenly across positionsRisk evenly across positions
Volatile positionsGet equal money, more riskGet less money, equal risk
SimplicityVery simpleNeeds volatility estimates
Risk balanceSkewed to volatile namesBalanced by construction
Blind spotIgnores volatility entirelyRelies on unstable volatility and correlation estimates

Practical example

Illustrative example (Indian market)

A trader with Rs 5,00,000 wants to hold three positions: a low-volatility largecap at about 15 percent annual volatility, a midcap at 30 percent, and a Nifty options-selling strategy whose effective volatility is around 45 percent. An equal-rupee split of Rs 1,66,000 each would load most of the portfolio's risk onto the options strategy, which is three times as volatile as the largecap. Using an equal-risk rule, weights proportional to 1 divided by volatility, the largecap gets the largest allocation, the midcap half of that, and the options strategy the smallest, roughly Rs 2,45,000, Rs 1,22,000 and Rs 82,000, so each contributes a similar risk. The trader also keeps a cash reserve outside this to meet SPAN plus exposure margin swings, treating cash as a deliberate allocation rather than idle money.

In an F&O account the allocation to cash is not optional comfort but a working requirement, because SPAN plus exposure margin is marked and can rise intraday as volatility spikes. A trader fully allocated with no cash buffer can be forced to liquidate at the worst moment to meet a margin call, so a margin reserve is a core part of the allocation.

Advantages

  • Distributes risk deliberately so no position quietly dominates the book
  • Equal-risk and risk-parity balance a book across positions of different volatility
  • Treats cash as a valuable allocation for survival and opportunity
  • Allocating across weakly correlated strategies smooths the equity curve
  • Rebalancing restores the intended risk distribution and sells high, buys low

Limitations

  • Equal-risk and risk parity rely on volatility and correlation estimates that are unstable
  • Allocation drifts as prices move, silently raising concentration if not rebalanced
  • Rebalancing incurs costs, STT and taxes on realised gains in India
  • Strategy correlations can converge in a crisis, undermining cross-strategy allocation
  • An allocation rule optimises the risk split but cannot create an edge to allocate to

Why it matters in practice

  • Allocation decides how much of the book any single risk actually commands
  • The cash and margin-reserve allocation is what prevents forced liquidation in stress

Common mistakes

  • Splitting capital by equal rupees and assuming risk is equal too
  • Ignoring volatility so a leveraged or volatile position dominates portfolio risk
  • Treating cash as idle rather than as a deliberate, valuable allocation
  • Letting winners grow until the book concentrates, never rebalancing
  • Assuming strategy-level diversification holds when correlations converge in stress
  • Running fully allocated in F&O with no reserve for rising margin

Professional usage

Professional allocators size positions by risk contribution, using volatility and the correlation matrix rather than equal rupee weights, and many run explicit risk-parity or risk-budgeting frameworks so each bet contributes an intended share of total risk. They hold deliberate cash and margin reserves as part of the allocation, rebalance on a schedule or threshold to counter drift, and stress-test cross-strategy allocations under the assumption that correlations converge. Allocation is treated as the distribution of a fixed risk budget, not the distribution of rupees.

Key takeaways

  • Capital allocation should distribute risk, not equal rupees, across the book
  • Equal-risk and risk-parity size volatile positions smaller so each contributes equal risk
  • Cash is a deliberate allocation that buys survival and opportunity
  • Allocations drift with prices, so rebalancing restores the intended risk distribution

Frequently asked questions

What is capital allocation?
Capital allocation is the decision of how to divide an account across positions, strategies and cash. Done well it distributes risk rather than rupees, so each position contributes a controlled, intended share of total portfolio risk instead of a share dictated only by its rupee size.
Why is equal-rupee allocation misleading?
Because equal money does not mean equal risk. A position's risk depends on its volatility and correlation, not just its size, so an equal-rupee split hands more risk to the more volatile positions. Two equal-rupee positions in a calm largecap and a volatile smallcap carry very different risk.
What is equal-risk allocation?
Equal-risk allocation sizes each position so it contributes the same risk to the portfolio, typically by giving smaller capital allocations to more volatile positions. A simple version sets each weight inversely proportional to its volatility, so a position twice as volatile receives half the capital.
What is risk parity?
Risk parity is an allocation approach that sizes positions inversely to their volatility so each contributes equal risk to the portfolio. It is the institutional generalisation of equal-risk allocation, aiming for a balanced book where no single position dominates the total risk.
Is cash a real allocation?
Yes. Holding cash lowers gross exposure, cushions a broad fall, and preserves the ability to buy when others are forced to sell, so it behaves like an option on future opportunity. In F&O it is also the buffer that meets margin calls without forced liquidation, making it a deliberate, valuable allocation.
How much cash should I hold?
There is no universal figure; it depends on your strategy, leverage and view of risk. A leveraged F&O trader needs enough unencumbered cash to absorb rising SPAN plus exposure margin without forced liquidation, while a longer-term investor may hold cash as dry powder for opportunities. Cash costs return in a rising market but buys survival in a falling one.
What is rebalancing?
Rebalancing is trimming positions that have grown and topping up those that have shrunk to restore the intended target weights. It counters allocation drift, mechanically sells high and buys low, and keeps the risk distribution matching the plan, at the cost of transaction charges, STT and taxes on realised gains.
What is allocation drift?
Allocation drift is the way an initial allocation shifts as prices move: winners grow and losers shrink, so the book slowly concentrates into whatever has risen. Left unchecked, drift raises concentration and risk beyond the plan, turning a disciplined initial allocation into an unintended concentrated bet.
How is capital allocation different from position sizing?
Position sizing decides how large a single trade should be, usually from its stop and per-trade risk. Capital allocation is the higher-level decision of how the whole account is divided across all positions, strategies and cash. Allocation sets the risk budget; position sizing spends it on individual trades.
Can I allocate across strategies, not just positions?
Yes. Allocating capital across strategies with weakly correlated returns, such as trend-following and mean-reversion, smooths the equity curve because one may thrive when another struggles. But strategy correlations can converge in a crisis, so cross-strategy allocation must be stress-tested like position correlations.
Does allocation depend on correlation?
Deeply. A position's risk contribution depends on its correlation with the rest of the book, so the same position adds different risk depending on what else you hold. An allocation that ignores correlation can leave the book concentrated in a shared factor even when rupee weights look balanced.
Why does risk parity give volatile positions less capital?
Because a volatile position contributes more risk per rupee, so to equalise risk contributions it must receive less capital. Setting weights inversely proportional to volatility means a position twice as volatile gets half the money, balancing each position's standalone risk in the portfolio.
What are the limits of equal-risk allocation?
It relies on volatility and correlation estimates that are unstable and backward-looking, so the balance it produces is only as good as those estimates. In a crisis, volatilities spike and correlations converge, so a book that looked balanced can become concentrated in the shared risk, defeating the intended parity.
Does capital allocation create an edge?
No. Allocation optimises how a fixed risk budget is distributed across bets, improving the risk-adjusted behaviour of a book, but it cannot manufacture positive expectancy where none exists. You still need genuine edges to allocate to; allocation preserves and balances an edge, it does not create one.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Capital Allocation.

What is capital allocation?
It is how you split your money across your trades, strategies and cash. Done right, it spreads risk evenly, not just rupees, so no single bet dominates.
Should I put equal money in each trade?
Not quite. Equal money is not equal risk. A volatile position needs less money to carry the same risk as a calm one, so size by risk, not rupees.
Is holding cash a waste?
No. Cash lowers your risk, lets you buy when others panic, and covers margin calls without forced selling. It is a real position, not idle money.
What is rebalancing?
It is trimming what has grown and adding to what has shrunk, back to your target weights. It keeps your risk balanced and quietly sells high, buys low.
What is risk parity?
It is splitting your capital so each position adds the same amount of risk, giving less money to the more volatile bets so nothing dominates.
How much cash should I keep in an F and O account?
Enough to cover margin rising when volatility spikes, so you are never forced to sell at the worst moment to meet a margin call.

Sources & references

    Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.

    Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and simplified models. Risk-management techniques reduce but never remove risk, and trading derivatives involves substantial risk of loss. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.