Samsung Pip Value Calculator | SAMSUNG CFD
Get Pulsar Terminal for advanced position sizingPip Value — SAMSUNG
| Pip Size | 1 |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| Contract Size | 1 |
| Typical Spread | 5 pips |
Trading Tools
Calculate your trading costs and position sizes for SAMSUNG
Spread Cost Calculator
Estimated costs based on standard forex lot ($10/pip). Actual costs vary by instrument and market conditions.
Position Size Calculator
Calculate optimal lot size based on your risk management
Based on standard forex lot ($10/pip). Adjust for different instruments. Always verify with your broker.
Most traders obsess over entry signals and ignore the one number that determines whether their account survives a losing streak: pip value. For Samsung Electronics (SAMSUNG) CFDs, the pip value is fixed at 1 currency unit per pip, per contract — making position sizing calculations unusually clean. Get this right before you place a single trade.
Key Takeaways
- The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For SAMSUNG, the pip size is 1 a...
- Samsung Electronics traded around the 70,000–80,000 KRW range through much of 2023. Price swings of 500–1,000 points int...
- Here's what most retail traders get backwards: they set a stop-loss distance first, then pick an arbitrary lot size. Tha...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for Samsung Electronics CFD
The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots.
For SAMSUNG, the pip size is 1 and the contract size is 1. That means each lot you trade is worth exactly 1 unit of account currency per pip of movement. No currency conversion complexity. No variable multipliers. One lot moves one pip, you gain or lose 1 unit.
Scaling up is linear. Five lots give you a pip value of 5. Ten lots give you 10. This makes SAMSUNG one of the simpler instruments to size positions on — the math never requires a calculator once you understand the base relationship.
2Real Example: What a 50-Pip Move in Samsung Actually Costs You
Samsung Electronics traded around the 70,000–80,000 KRW range through much of 2023. Price swings of 500–1,000 points intraday were common during earnings seasons.
Using the instrument data: if you hold 10 contracts and Samsung moves 50 pips against your position, your loss is 50 pips × 1 pip value × 10 contracts = 500 units of account currency. The typical spread of 5 pips means your trade starts 5 units in the red per contract — factor that into your break-even calculation.
Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills Samsung's contract size and pip value, so your position size updates instantly as you adjust lot size before entry. With a 1% risk rule on a 10,000-unit account, you can afford a 100-unit loss — that's a 100-pip stop on 1 contract, or a 50-pip stop on 2 contracts. Run those numbers before the trade, not after.
“Here's what most retail traders get backwards: they set a stop-loss distance first, then pick an arbitrary lot size.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Your Risk Per Trade — Not Just Your Stop Distance
Here's what most retail traders get backwards: they set a stop-loss distance first, then pick an arbitrary lot size. That's the wrong order. The pip value is the anchor — your lot size must be derived from it.
With SAMSUNG's pip value of 1 per contract, the math is unforgiving in its clarity. A 200-pip stop on 5 contracts means 1,000 units at risk. If that exceeds 2% of your account, you're oversized — full stop. The 5-pip spread also means short-term scalping setups need at least a 15–20 pip target to produce a 1:2 risk-reward ratio after spread costs.
Stock CFDs like Samsung can gap significantly overnight and around quarterly earnings releases (Samsung reports every January, April, July, and October). Holding positions through those events with improper sizing has wiped out accounts that looked perfectly hedged on paper. Know your pip value. Size accordingly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1What is the pip value for Samsung Electronics CFD?
The pip value for SAMSUNG CFD is 1 unit of account currency per pip, per contract. With a contract size of 1 and pip size of 1, the calculation is direct: your profit or loss equals the number of pips moved multiplied by your number of contracts.

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.