Live Cattle Pip Value Calculator | CATTLE
— CATTLE
| 0.01 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $4 |
| 400 | |
| 12 pips |
Live Cattle futures carry a fixed pip value of $4 per 0.01 price move — a figure that directly determines how much capital is at risk on every trade. With a contract size of 400 and a typical spread of 12 pips, position sizing errors compound quickly. Getting this number right before entry is non-negotiable.
- Pip value for Live Cattle is calculated using this formula: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. Plugging in the instru...
- A 50-pip adverse move on one Live Cattle contract produces a loss of exactly $200 (50 × $4). Factor in the typical sprea...
- Risk management starts with a fixed dollar risk per trade — typically 1–2% of account equity. With a $10,000 account and...
1How Is Pip Value Calculated for Live Cattle?
Pip value for Live Cattle is calculated using this formula: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. Plugging in the instrument data: 0.01 × 400 = $4.00 per pip, per contract. That means each full point move (100 pips) shifts your P&L by $400. The formula holds constant regardless of current price, which makes Live Cattle straightforward to model compared to forex pairs where pip value fluctuates with the exchange rate. Pulsar Terminal includes a built-in pip value calculator that auto-fills instrument data like contract size and pip value, eliminating manual lookup errors before you place a trade.
2Example: What Does a 50-Pip Move Cost on CATTLE?
A 50-pip adverse move on one Live Cattle contract produces a loss of exactly $200 (50 × $4). Factor in the typical spread of 12 pips — worth $48 per contract — and a round-trip trade that moves 50 pips against you costs $248 before any commission. Scaling to 3 contracts, that same scenario generates a $744 drawdown. These numbers matter when setting stop-loss distances. A 30-pip stop on a single contract risks $120; a 100-pip stop risks $400. Historically, intraday ranges on Live Cattle futures have averaged 80–120 pips during active sessions, meaning stops tighter than 40 pips face a high probability of noise-driven exits.
“Risk management starts with a fixed dollar risk per trade — typically 1–2% of account equity.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Your Maximum Position Size
Risk management starts with a fixed dollar risk per trade — typically 1–2% of account equity. With a $10,000 account and a 1% risk rule, maximum exposure per trade is $100. At $4 per pip, that allows a stop of only 25 pips on one contract. Widening the stop to 50 pips either requires cutting to fractional contracts or accepting 2% risk. Since 2020, Live Cattle volatility has increased during USDA report releases, with single-session moves exceeding 200 pips on several occasions. Position sizing calculated in advance — not estimated — keeps those events from becoming account-threatening. The $4 fixed pip value actually simplifies this math: divide your dollar risk by 4 to get your maximum allowable stop in pips.
Q1What is the pip value for one Live Cattle contract?
One Live Cattle contract has a pip value of $4 per 0.01 price increment, based on a contract size of 400. A 100-pip move equals $400 profit or loss per contract.
Q2How does the spread affect Live Cattle trading costs?
The typical spread on Live Cattle is 12 pips, which translates to $48 per contract at entry. On a 3-contract position, spread cost alone reaches $144 before the market moves a single pip in either direction.
