The Trading Mentorआपका ट्रेडिंग मार्गदर्शक

CHFJPY Pip Value Calculator – CHF/JPY Trading

··

CHFJPY

0.01
Pip Value (1 lot)$6.67
100,000
2.5 pips

$0.25
$0.75
$16.50
$198.00

Risk LevelMedium Risk
0.40
$200.00
$4.00
: $200184£158

You've set a 30-pip stop-loss on CHFJPY and hit execute — but do you know exactly how much you're risking in dollars? On this pair, each pip carries a $6.67 price tag on a standard lot, meaning that 30-pip stop represents $200.10 of real capital on the line before spreads even enter the picture.

  • CHFJPY is a cross pair where neither currency is USD, which means the pip value calculation requires a conversion step m...
  • A $6.67 pip value sounds abstract until you map it to an actual trade. Here's a concrete scenario: you buy 1 standard lo...
  • Since 2015, when the Swiss National Bank shocked markets by removing the EUR/CHF floor, CHFJPY has been capable of 200+ ...
1

How to Calculate CHFJPY Pip Value Using the Standard Formula

CHFJPY is a cross pair where neither currency is USD, which means the pip value calculation requires a conversion step most traders overlook. The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) ÷ Current Exchange Rate — but the result comes out in JPY, not USD. You then divide by the USD/JPY rate to convert to dollars.

For CHFJPY specifically: pip size is 0.01, and the standard contract size is 100,000 CHF. So the base calculation is (0.01 × 100,000) = 1,000 JPY per pip. Divide that by the prevailing USD/JPY rate — say 150.00 — and you get $6.67 per pip. That figure shifts as USD/JPY moves, which is why static pip tables mislead. Pulsar Terminal includes a built-in pip value calculator that auto-fills CHFJPY's contract size and pip size, recalculating live as rates move.

2

CHFJPY Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position

A $6.67 pip value sounds abstract until you map it to an actual trade. Here's a concrete scenario: you buy 1 standard lot of CHFJPY at 168.50, targeting a 50-pip move to 169.00, with a 20-pip stop at 168.30.

Profit target: 50 pips × $6.67 = $333.50. Risk: 20 pips × $6.67 = $133.40. That's a reward-to-risk ratio of roughly 2.5:1 — solid on paper. Now factor in the typical spread of 2.5 pips on CHFJPY. That spread costs 2.5 × $6.67 = $16.68 per round trip, which effectively tightens your target to 47.5 pips ($316.82) the moment you enter. On a 20-pip stop, that spread represents 12.5% of your total risk budget. Small spreads compound into meaningful drag on tight setups — this is why knowing the exact pip value before entering matters, not after.

Since 2015, when the Swiss National Bank shocked markets by removing the EUR/CHF floor, CHFJPY has been capable of 200+ pip daily swings during risk-off events.

3

Why CHFJPY Pip Value Directly Controls Your Position Size

Since 2015, when the Swiss National Bank shocked markets by removing the EUR/CHF floor, CHFJPY has been capable of 200+ pip daily swings during risk-off events. At $6.67 per pip, a 200-pip move on one standard lot equals $1,334 — roughly 13% of a $10,000 account wiped or gained in a single session.

This is where pip value becomes a risk management tool, not just a math exercise. Position sizing works backwards from pip value: if your account is $10,000 and your maximum risk per trade is 1% ($100), you divide $100 by your stop distance in dollar terms. A 15-pip stop costs 15 × $6.67 = $100.05 on one standard lot — that's your entire 1% risk budget consumed by a single lot. To trade with a 15-pip stop while risking only $50, you'd need to drop to a mini lot (0.1 lots), where pip value falls to $0.667. The math only works cleanly when you know the pip value before you size the position.