NAS100 Pip Value Calculator – NASDAQ 100
— NAS100
| 1 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| 1 | |
| 1.5 pips |
A single NAS100 position moving 50 points against you costs exactly $50 per contract — no ambiguity, no estimation. Yet many traders open positions on the NASDAQ 100 without confirming this figure first, leaving their risk calculations built on guesswork. Here is exactly how pip value works on NAS100 and why it anchors every serious position-sizing decision.
- The NAS100 pip value formula is straightforward because the contract size is 1 and the pip size is 1. The calculation ru...
- The NASDAQ 100 closed above 18,000 for the first time in June 2024 — a level where even modest intraday swings of 150–20...
- A fixed $1.00 pip value sounds simple. The risk comes from the index's volatility, not the math. According to data from ...
1How to Calculate NAS100 Pip Value
The NAS100 pip value formula is straightforward because the contract size is 1 and the pip size is 1. The calculation runs as follows:
Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size Pip Value = 1 × 1 = $1.00 per pip, per contract
That means each one-point move in the NASDAQ 100 index price equals exactly $1.00 in profit or loss when trading one standard NAS100 contract. Scale to 5 contracts and a 100-point move produces a $500 swing. The math stays linear, making position sizing unusually clean compared to forex pairs where pip value shifts with exchange rates. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills contract size and pip value for NAS100, eliminating manual lookup before every trade.
2NAS100 Pip Value Example: Running the Numbers
The NASDAQ 100 closed above 18,000 for the first time in June 2024 — a level where even modest intraday swings of 150–200 points became routine. Consider this concrete scenario:
- Entry price: 18,250
- Stop-loss: 18,150 (100 points away)
- Contracts: 3
- Pip value: $1.00
Maximum risk = 100 points × $1.00 × 3 contracts = $300
The typical spread on NAS100 runs 1.5 points, adding $1.50 in immediate cost per contract at entry. On 3 contracts that is $4.50 — small relative to a 100-point stop, but worth factoring into the breakeven calculation. If the account holds $10,000 and the risk policy caps exposure at 2%, the maximum allowable loss is $200, meaning this particular setup at 3 contracts slightly exceeds that threshold and requires adjustment to 2 contracts.
“A fixed $1.00 pip value sounds simple.”
3Why NAS100 Pip Value Drives Risk Management Decisions
A fixed $1.00 pip value sounds simple. The risk comes from the index's volatility, not the math. According to data from the Chicago Board Options Exchange, the NASDAQ 100 averaged daily ranges exceeding 200 points during periods of elevated VIX readings in 2022 and 2023. At 200 points per day, a 5-contract position carries $1,000 in daily exposure range — the kind of figure that can breach a prop firm's maximum drawdown rule inside a single session.
This is where pip value translates directly into contract sizing. The formula works backward from risk tolerance: if the maximum acceptable loss on a trade is $150 and the stop is 75 points away, the maximum position size is exactly 2 contracts ($150 ÷ 75 points ÷ $1.00). No approximation. The fixed pip value on NAS100 makes this arithmetic faster than on instruments with variable pip values, which is a genuine operational advantage when markets move quickly.
