What is a pip in trading? | OANDA
What are pips in leverage trading? Our article explains the basics of pips and ticks and how to use them when trading with OANDA
What are pips in leverage trading? Our article explains the basics of pips and ticks and how to use them when trading with OANDA
In this article you will learn:
- What a pip is and what it represents
- How to calculate gains and losses based on pips
- What is a pipette and why it was introduced
What does “pip” mean?
Pip stands for ‘percentage in point’. A pip in forex trading is the smallest standardised move by which a current quote can change. As it defines the change in price (for instance between two currencies), traders calculate the spread between the bid and ask prices of the traded instrument, and refer to the profit or loss that their position has made in terms of pips.
How does a pip work?
As mentioned above, each one pip move in your favour translates into a profit and every one pip move that goes against you translates into a loss. The size of that move determines how big the profit or loss is. Let’s focus on some real-life examples on how that translates to trading the markets.
How a pip works in currencies
Most currency pairs are priced out to four decimal places and the pip change is the last (fourth) decimal point. One pip, therefore, is equivalent to 1/100 of 1% or one basis point.
The Japanese yen is a notable exception, as these currency pairs are quoted to only two decimal places. To calculate a change in pips in forex trading for, say USD/JPY, you have to look at the second digit after the decimal point.
With a yen currency pair such as USD/JPY, a move of 154.01 to 154.02 would be a single-pip movement. This means that if you decided to enter a long position on the pair and closed your trade as the price reached 154.51, you would make a 50-pip profit (154.51 - 154.01 = 0.50).
Let’s take a look at some examples. Let’s say you’re trading the EUR/USD currency pair. If the market were to move from 1.1600 to 1.1605, that 0.0005 increase would be a 5-pip move.
If you had entered a long position (clicking on buy), and the market moved from 1.1600 to 1.1650, and at that point you closed your trade, you would have made a profit of 50 pips (1.1600 - 1.1650 = 0.0050). Conversely, let’s say you had placed a stop loss at 1.1550 and the market moved against you, dropping from 1.1600 to 1.1550. Assuming there was no slippage, your stop-loss order would be hit and you would have made a loss of 50 pips (1.1600 - 1.1550 = 0.0050).
How pips work in other asset classes
Gains and losses in pips
Example 1:
Let’s say you buy at 1.0598 to open a 100,000 unit trade on USD/CAD when it’s trading at 1.0597/1.0598.
When the value of USD/CAD rises to 1.0618/1.0619, you close the trade by selling at 1.0618. Given that one pip is a movement of 0.0001, you have made a profit of 20 pips (1.0618 – 1.0598 = 0.0020).
Example 2:
Let’s say you open an order to buy a 10,000 unit trade on USD/CAD when it’s trading at 1.0669/1.0670.
The value of USD/CAD falls to 1.0640/1.0641 and hits your stop loss, closing the trade for a 30-pip loss (1.0670 – 1.0640 = 0.0030) .
Example 3:
For the next example, let’s say you’re trading gold. The smallest contract size you can trade on our standard platforms is normally one ounce.
Let’s assume you bought 26 ounces of gold at US$1750 using an account in dollars, and you have your take profit set at US$1751.23. This means you’re expecting a gain of 123 pips.
Now you should multiply this by the number of ounces you have bought: 123 pips x 26 ounces = 3198 pips. To convert this number back to dollars, simply multiply it by the pip cost of 0.01. As a result, 3198 pips x US$0.01 pip cost = US$31.98. This is your expected profit on 26 ounces of gold if your take profit kicks in at a stop of 123 pips (US$1.23).
What is a pipette?
Fractional pips are known as "pipettes". A fractional pip is equivalent to 1/10 of a pip, giving you the EUR/USD currency pair with five decimal points, while yen pairs now extend to three decimal points. Pipettes are displayed in superscript format in the quote panel.
You can further build your knowledge of leverage trading by attending free live or recorded webinars that are conducted by our team of market analysts. Our webinars cover a range of strategies as well as how to use fundamental and technical analysis. Besides the introduction to leverage trading articles, you have access to live market analysis, premium webinars series and articles on basics of risk management.
Difference between leveraged and other forms of financial trading.
expand_less expand_moreUse fundamental analysis to your advantage.
expand_less expand_moreHow is technical analysis different from fundamental analysis?
expand_less expand_moreHow to build a robust trading strategy using indicators and oscillators.
expand_less expand_more