How much is that spread really costing you? I mean, in real Rands.

David van der Merwe
Emerging Markets Trader ·
South Africa
☕ 12 min read
What you'll learn:
- 1What is the Spread in Forex? It's Your First Trade
- 2Why Spreads Hit a South African Trader Differently
- 3Calculating the Real Cost: It's Not Just Pips
- 4Trading Strategies That Work With (Not Against) Spreads
- 5Choosing a Forex Broker in South Africa: The Spread Showdown
- 6Mistakes I Made (So You Don't Have To)
- 7Taking Control: Advanced Tips & Essential Tools
How much is that spread really costing you? I mean, in real Rands. You see the buy and sell price on your MT4 platform, that tiny gap between them. It looks insignificant, right? I used to think so too. Then I spent six months carefully tracking every trade and realised my broker was taking more from me in spreads than I was making in profits on my losing months. That's the silent killer in spread trading forex. It's not just a cost, it's the first hurdle your trade has to clear before it even thinks about being profitable. Let's talk about what it really means for us trading from SA, with our unique market hours, currency volatility, and broker options.
Forget the textbook definition for a second. The spread is the price of admission. It's the difference between the bid (what you can sell at) and the ask (what you can buy at). When you open a trade, you're instantly "in the red" by that amount. If the EUR/USD spread is 1.2 pips, your trade needs to move 1.2 pips in your favour just to break even.
Here’s where it gets real for us. Most brokers quote major pairs like EUR/USD and GBP/USD in pips. But when you're trading USD/ZAR or EUR/ZAR? You'll often see it in points, which are a tenth of a pip. A 500-point spread on USD/ZAR might sound huge, but it's actually 50 pips. You need to understand this conversion, or you'll completely misjudge your risk. I learned this the hard way early on, using my standard position size calculator without adjusting for the point difference on a ZAR pair. My planned 1% risk turned into a 3% loss before the market even blinked.
Warning: Never assume a "point" is a "pip." On many platforms, South African Rand pairs and other exotics display spreads in points. Always check your broker's glossary. A 1000-point spread is often 100 pips, which is a massive cost to overcome.
There are two main types: fixed and variable. Fixed spreads stay the same (mostly offered by market maker brokers). Variable spreads fluctuate with market liquidity - tight during London/New York overlap, wider when Asia is winding down and we're just starting our day in Johannesburg. That 7 AM SAST time can be treacherous.

💡 Winston's Tip
The spread is a toll bridge. Know the toll before you start your journey. Calculate it in Rands on every single trade, no exceptions.
“The spread isn't a fee, it's the first trade you make - and it's always against you.”
Our reality is different from a trader in London or New York. We're not at the centre of the forex universe, and our market hours create specific challenges that directly impact spread trading forex profitability.
Trading Session Overlap (Or Lack Thereof)
Our most active trading time is roughly 9 AM to 5 PM SAST. The sweet spot for low spreads is the London session (10 AM SAST onwards) and the London/New York overlap (3 PM to 5 PM SAST). If you're a morning person trading at 6 AM, you're dealing with the tail end of the Asian session and the thin liquidity before London opens. Spreads on pairs like GBP/USD can be 2-3 times wider. I used to try and scalping strategy the early morning moves on EUR/USD. My strategy was technically sound, but the wider spreads ate all my potential 5-7 pip profits. I was basically working for my broker.
The ZAR Pairs Problem
Trading USD/ZAR, EUR/ZAR, or GBP/ZAR is tempting. We feel we understand the local news. But these are exotic pairs. Their spreads are inherently much wider than majors. A typical spread on EUR/USD might be 0.8 pips. On USD/ZAR, it could be 50-80 pips (or 500-800 points). That means a $10,000 trade immediately starts R800-R1300 in the hole, depending on the rate. You need a much larger price movement just to cover costs. It forces you into a longer-term swing trading mindset, which isn't bad, but you must be aware of it.
Example: Let's say you buy USD/ZAR at 18.5000 with an 80-pip (8 ZAR cent) spread. Your entry price is effectively 18.5080. The market needs to move to 18.5080 for you to be at breakeven. That's a 0.043% move just to cover the spread. On a R100,000 position, that's R430 gone before you start.
Broker Choice is Everything
International brokers like IC Markets or Pepperstone often offer razor-thin spreads on majors via their Raw/ECN accounts (but charge a commission). Local South African brokers might have wider spreads but no commission, and easier ZAR deposits/withdrawals. You have to do the math: commission + spread vs. wider spread only. For high-frequency trading, the ECN model usually wins. For longer-term holds, a local broker's all-in spread might be simpler.
“I realised my broker was taking more from me in spreads than I was making in profits on my losing months.”
This is the most important math you'll do. You need to translate pips into Rands. The formula is simple, but ignoring it is deadly.
Cost in ZAR = (Spread in Pips) x (Pip Value in ZAR)
Your pip value depends on your lot size and the pair. Let's break it down with a real mistake I made. I was trading GBP/USD, standard 1.0 lot (100,000 units). The spread was 1.5 pips. On GBP/USD, a 1-pip move on a standard lot is $10. So, the cost was 1.5 x $10 = $15. At an exchange rate of USD/ZAR 18.00, that's R270 gone the moment I clicked ‘buy’.
Now, here’s the kicker. I was aiming for a 20-pip profit, which is $200 (R3,600). The spread took 7.5% of my potential profit right off the top. On a losing trade, it adds to the loss. Over 100 trades a month, that's R27,000 in spread costs alone, win or lose. It made me realise why my high-frequency approach was failing. I switched to fewer, higher-probability trades where the spread was a smaller percentage of my target.
Pro Tip: Before you enter any trade, calculate the spread cost as a percentage of your take-profit target. If it's more than 10%, reconsider. Either your target is too small (maybe you're scalping in a wide-spread environment) or the pair is too expensive to trade for your strategy.
Use a good position size calculator that lets you input the spread. It will show you your true break-even point and adjust your risk accordingly. Never rely on the platform's default P&L, which usually starts calculating from your entry price, ignoring the spread.
“I realised my broker was taking more from me in spreads than I was making in profits on my losing months.”
You can't fight the spread. You have to build your strategy around it. Here’s what I found works from Cape Town.
1. The Swing Trader's Edge: This is the most forgiving. If you're aiming for 200-500 pip moves on the EUR/USD guide or XAU/USD guide, a 1-2 pip spread is noise. Your stop-loss needs to be placed far enough away so that normal spread widening doesn't snipe you. I aim for a minimum 1:3 risk-to-reward. If my stop is 50 pips, my target is 150+. The spread is a tiny fraction of that.
2. Avoiding the News Trap: Economic data releases cause massive spread widening. I got caught in this once with SA CPI data. The USD/ZAR spread ballooned from 60 pips to over 300 pips in seconds. My stop-loss was triggered at a horrific price, creating a loss double what I planned. Now, I close all positions or use guaranteed stop-losses (if offered) 15 minutes before major news. The peace of mind is worth the premium.
3. Pair Selection is Key: Stick to major pairs during your active hours. If you trade early morning, consider the AUD/USD or NZD/USD (Asian session liquidity). Save the ZAR pairs for deliberate, fundamental swing trading plays where you have a strong multi-day view.
4. Time Your Entries: Be patient. Don't just jump in. Watch the spread for a minute. If you're trading the London open, wait 15-30 minutes for the initial volatility and spread widening to settle. That extra patience can save you half a pip or more on entry, which adds up.
A tool that helps immensely with managing these risks is a trading terminal that lets you set orders precisely. For instance, setting a multi-level take-profit where you close part of your position early to cover the spread cost and let the rest run risk-free is a game-saver. This kind of order management is a core feature of tools like Pulsar Terminal, letting you automate that profit-securing move directly on MT5.

💡 Winston's Tip
Your most expensive trade is often the one you make out of boredom. Wide spreads + impatient entries = a guaranteed donation to your broker.

“Trading USD/ZAR with a scalper's mindset is like trying to sprint through thick beach sand.”
This is your most critical decision. The wrong broker will bleed you dry with costs. Here’s a blunt comparison from my experience testing accounts.
| Broker Type | Typical EUR/USD Spread | Commission | Best For... | Watch Out For... |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| International ECN (e.g., IC Markets) | 0.0 - 0.2 pips | $3.50 per lot (round turn) | Scalpers, high-volume traders, algos. | Inactivity fees, slower ZAR withdrawals, potential margin call speed. |
| Int'l Standard (e.g., XM) | 1.0 - 1.5 pips | None | Beginners, longer-term traders, smaller accounts. | Wider spreads on exotics, price execution during news. |
| Local SA Broker (FSCA Regulated) | 1.5 - 2.5 pips | None | Easy deposits/withdrawals (EFT), local support, ZAR pairs. | Much wider spreads, potentially fewer instruments. |
My Experience: I started with a local broker for convenience. The spreads were high, but I didn't know better. When I switched to an ECN account at an international broker, my trading style had to change. I was now paying per trade. It forced better discipline - no more tiny, pointless trades. My overall costs dropped by about 40% because I was trading less but more effectively.
Regulation Matters: Always use an FSCA-regulated broker (for local ones) or a top-tier international regulator like ASIC, FCA, or CySEC. This protects your funds. I’ve heard horror stories from mates who used unregulated offshore brokers offering 0-pip spreads - they couldn't withdraw their profits.
The Demo Test: Don't just look at the advertised spread. Open a demo account for a week. Track the actual spreads you get at your trading times. Check the spread on USD/ZAR at 8 AM vs. 4 PM. The data doesn't lie.
Managing the high costs of spread trading forex requires precise order execution, like securing partial profits quickly, which Pulsar Terminal automates directly on your MT5 platform.
Pulsar Terminal
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“Trading USD/ZAR with a scalper's mindset is like trying to sprint through thick beach sand.”
Let's get vulnerable. Here are the spread-related errors that cost me real money.
1. Scalping with a Standard Account: I tried to scalp the 5-minute chart on a broker with a 1.8-pip fixed spread. My targets were 7-10 pips. The spread was taking 18-25% of my profit. I had to be right nearly 70% of the time just to break even. I wasn't. I blew up that R15,000 account in under two months.
2. Ignoring Swap Rates on Overnight Holds: This isn't the spread, but it's a related cost. I held a USD/ZAR short position for a week to capture a trend. The negative swap (finance charge) was enormous because of the SA interest rate differential. It eroded over R500 from my gains. Combined with the wide entry spread, my "winning" trade felt pretty mediocre. Always check the swap rates before holding a carry trade, especially on ZAR pairs.
3. Placing Stops Too Tight: I'd place a 10-pip stop-loss on EUR/USD. During a minor news hiccup, the spread would widen from 1 pip to 5 pips momentarily. My stop would get hit at the worst possible price due to that temporary widening, and then the price would snap back. I learned to place stops beyond obvious support/resistance, giving the market room to breathe and absorb spread volatility. Using indicators like the RSI indicator or MACD indicator for confluence helped me find better, safer entry zones away from the noise.
4. Chasing "Zero Spread" Offers: If an offer sounds too good to be true, it is. Some brokers advertise zero spread but have massive commissions or terrible execution (slippage). The total cost of trading is what matters: Spread + Commission + Slippage. Focus on that total.
“Patience isn't just a virtue in trading; it's a direct method to reduce your spread costs.”
Once you've mastered the basics, these steps will refine your spread trading forex edge.
Use a VPS: A Virtual Private Server located near your broker's data centre (often in London). This reduces latency, which can mean getting a better price within the spread, especially for scalping. For a few dollars a month, it's a no-brainer if you're serious.
Understand the Order Book (Depth of Market): If your broker provides it, watch the DOM. It shows pending buy and sell orders. A thin order book means spreads can widen easily. A thick one suggests stability. Don't enter a large trade when the book is thin.
Correlation to Manage Risk: If you're long EUR/USD and short GBP/USD (they are often correlated), you're not just hedging market direction, you're also hedging the spread cost on two separate trades. This is advanced, but it's a way institutional traders manage transaction costs.
Automate Your Cost Analysis: Don't manually calculate spread cost every time. Create a simple spreadsheet or use a trading journal app. Input the pair, spread at entry, and lot size. Over time, you'll see exactly which pairs and times of day are most costly for your style. This data is gold.
Finally, consider the tools you use. Manual trading is fine, but managing multiple trades, setting trailing stops, and moving to breakeven can be stressful and slow. Using a dedicated trading terminal that sits on top of MT5 can automate these risk management tasks. For example, setting a trailing stop that activates only after a certain profit level, or automatically closing a portion of your trade at a first target to secure the spread and some profit, takes the emotion out. It ensures your spread trading forex plan is executed precisely, which is half the battle.

💡 Winston's Tip
If you can't easily state the spread cost as a percentage of your profit target, you're not ready to click 'buy'. Go back and do the math.

FAQ
Q1What is a good spread for a South African forex trader?
It depends on your strategy. For scalping majors, look for under 1 pip total cost (spread + commission). For swing trading, anything under 2 pips on EUR/USD is acceptable. For USD/ZAR, expect 50-100 pips; under 70 is decent. Always judge by the total cost of the trade, not just the advertised number.
Q2Should I use a fixed or variable spread broker?
Variable spreads are generally better. They're tighter during liquid market hours (London/NY overlap). Fixed spreads often widen dramatically during news events anyway, or the broker rejects orders. Variable spreads reflect true market conditions. The key is to avoid trading during naturally illiquid times when variables are wide.
Q3How do I convert points to pips on USD/ZAR?
Carefully! On most MetaTrader platforms, USD/ZAR is quoted to two decimal places (e.g., 18.50). The 2nd decimal is a pip. The 3rd decimal (which you see as an extra digit) is a point (1/10 of a pip). So, a price move from 18.5000 to 18.5001 is 1 point. A move to 18.5010 is 1 pip (or 10 points). Always check your specific broker's definitions in their contract specifications.
Q4Can I make money scalping with wide spreads?
It's incredibly difficult and I don't recommend it. If your target is 10 pips and the spread is 3 pips, you need a 30% move just to cover costs. Your win rate and risk-reward need to be exceptional. Scalping requires the lowest possible transaction costs, which usually means an ECN account with a commission.
Q5Do spreads get wider on weekends?
The forex market is closed on weekends. However, spreads may widen significantly on Friday afternoon before the close (after 5 PM SAST) and Sunday evening when markets reopen, due to lower liquidity and banks pricing in weekend risk. Avoid opening new positions during these times.
Q6Is a 'zero spread' account a good idea?
Be very skeptical. 'Zero spread' usually means a high commission per trade. This can be good for high-volume traders if the total cost is low. However, some unscrupulous brokers use it as a marketing gimmick and have poor execution with lots of slippage, which costs you more. Always test on demo first.
Prof. Winston's Lesson

Key Takeaways:
- ✓Always convert spread cost to your local currency (ZAR).
- ✓Avoid scalping during low-liquidity SA morning hours.
- ✓Test real spreads on demo at your specific trading times.
- ✓Choose your broker based on total cost, not advertised spread.
- ✓Place stop-losses 2-3x the average spread width away.
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About the Author
David van der Merwe
Emerging Markets Trader
Johannesburg-based trader with 11 years in emerging market currencies. Specializes in ZAR pairs, FSCA-regulated trading, and South African market analysis.
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Risk Disclaimer
Trading financial instruments carries significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results. This content is for educational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Always conduct your own research before trading.
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