Why These Concepts Matter

Before you place a single trade in the forex market, you need to understand three foundational concepts: pips, lots, and leverage. These aren't just jargon — they directly determine how much money you make or lose on every trade. Getting them wrong is one of the most common reasons new traders blow their accounts.

What Is a Pip?

A pip (Percentage In Point) is the smallest standardised price movement in a currency pair. For most currency pairs, one pip equals a move of 0.0001 (the fourth decimal place).

Example: If EUR/USD moves from 1.0850 to 1.0855, that's a movement of 5 pips.

For pairs involving the Japanese Yen (JPY), one pip equals 0.01 (the second decimal place). So USD/JPY moving from 149.50 to 149.55 is also 5 pips.

What About Pipettes?

Many MT4 brokers quote prices to a fifth decimal place. This fractional pip is called a pipette (or point). So EUR/USD at 1.08504 vs 1.08514 is a difference of 1 pip and 0 pipettes vs 1 pip — just a more precise measurement.

What Is a Lot?

A lot is the standardised unit of measurement for trade size in forex. It defines how many currency units you're buying or selling.

Lot Type Units of Base Currency Pip Value (EUR/USD approx.)
Standard Lot 100,000 ~$10 per pip
Mini Lot 10,000 ~$1 per pip
Micro Lot 1,000 ~$0.10 per pip
Nano Lot 100 ~$0.01 per pip

Note: Pip values vary slightly depending on the currency pair and current exchange rate.

What Is Leverage?

Leverage allows you to control a large position with a relatively small amount of capital. It's expressed as a ratio, such as 1:100, which means for every $1 in your account, you can control $100 in the market.

Example: With $1,000 in your account and 1:100 leverage, you can open a position worth $100,000 (one standard lot).

Leverage Is a Double-Edged Sword

Leverage amplifies both profits and losses equally. A 1% move in your favour on a leveraged trade could double your investment — but the same move against you could wipe it out entirely.

  • High leverage (e.g., 1:500): Small account can trade large sizes, but margin calls happen fast.
  • Low leverage (e.g., 1:10): More conservative, provides a larger buffer against adverse moves.

What Is Margin?

Margin is the deposit your broker requires to open and maintain a leveraged position. It's not a fee — it's collateral held temporarily while your trade is open.

Margin formula: Margin Required = Trade Size ÷ Leverage

Example: Opening 1 standard lot (100,000) on EUR/USD with 1:100 leverage requires $1,000 margin.

Putting It All Together: A Simple Example

You have a $2,000 account, use 1:50 leverage, and buy 0.5 mini lots (5,000 units) of EUR/USD.

  • Pip value ≈ $0.50 per pip.
  • You set a stop-loss 20 pips away — maximum loss = $10.
  • Your target is 40 pips — potential profit = $20.
  • This represents a risk of 0.5% of your account — well within sensible risk limits.

Key Takeaways

  • A pip is the standard unit of price movement in forex.
  • Lot size determines how much each pip is worth in dollar terms.
  • Leverage lets you control large positions with small capital but increases risk proportionally.
  • Always calculate your pip value and potential loss before entering any trade.