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Let me Give you the PIPS

English translation German translation - Deutsche Übersetzung French translation - Traduction française Italian translation - Traduzione italiana Spanish translation - Traducción española Portuguese translation - Tradução portuguese Chinese translation - 中国翻译 Japanese translation - 日本翻訳 Korean translation - 한국 번역 Arabic translation - الترجمه العربيه

 

Generate a 5 Figure income Trading the Forex Market
Veteran trader Reveals How to Generate a 5 Figure income Trading the Forex Market with a Revolutionary and Unique Strategy: "Learn to profit consistently and systematically trading the Forex market with my 3 top PDFT (Price Driven Forex Trading) strategies."



Author: Admin

Understanding Pips

To forex traders, everything revolves around pips.

"I'm up 35 pips for the day."

"I made a 127 pip profit on my last trade."

That's great, but what's a pip?

Pip is short for "percentage in point" and you may
sometimes hear people refer to pips as points.

Put simply, a pip is the smallest unit of price for
a currency. It's the last decimal point in every
exchange rate or currency pair.

For most currencies its 0.0001. So if you bought
USD/CHF 1.2475 and sold at 1.2489 you made 14 pips.

One common exception is USD/JPY. In this currency
pair there are only two decimal places so a pip is
equal to 0.01.

The reason pips are so important is because they are
the basis for calculating profit or loss.

Pip Value.
With all these different currency pairs to deal with
and with prices fluctuating all the time, how do you
know the value of a pip?

It's a simple calculation. For currency pairs in
which USD is the base currency, just divide a pip
(usually 0.0001) by the exchange rate.

For currency pairs in which USD is the quote currency,
its even simpler. The pip value is always one pip
(for example, 0.0001).

So in our example above, when the exchange rate for
USD.CHF is 1.2489:

0.0001 / 1.2489 = 0.0000800704

That's a pretty tiny number. But remember that in
forex trading you are able to leverage small sums
of money to move large quantities of currency.

In other words, you can use leverage to make big
profits off of that tiny number.

Let's say your broker allows you to trade with
leverage of 100:1. This means that in order to
buy a standard lot of $100,000, you only need
to put up $1,000.

You can see how trading in larger lots affects
the pip value, and therefore your profit or loss:

If you are only trading $1,000 in currency, the pip
value is calculated as follows:

0.0000800704 X 1000 = $0.08 per pip.

The price would have to go up by a whole lot of pips
in order to make a significant profit at that rate.
That 14 pip profit only made you $1.12.

But by using leverage to buy a lot size of $100,000
your profit increases.

0.0000800704 X 100,000 = $8.01 per pip.

That's a profit of $112.14. Now you're talking.


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