TSLA Pip Value Calculator – Tesla Stock CFD
Pulsar Terminal で高度なポジションサイジングをピップ値 — TSLA
| ピップサイズ | 0.01 |
| ピップ値(1ロット) | $1 |
| コントラクトサイズ | 1 |
| 標準スプレッド | 1 pips |
取引ツール
TSLA の取引コストとポジションサイズを計算
スプレッドコスト計算ツール
標準外国為替ロット ($10/pip) に基づく推定コスト。実際のコストは商品や市場状況により異なります。
ポジションサイズ計算ツール
リスク管理に基づいた最適なロットサイズを計算
標準外国為替ロット ($10/pip) に基づきます。商品に応じて調整してください。必ずブローカーに確認してください。
You've sized a Tesla position and set a 50-pip stop-loss — but do you know exactly how much that stop costs in dollars? For TSLA CFDs, the math is straightforward once you understand the instrument's structure: a pip size of 0.01, a contract size of 1 share, and a fixed pip value of $1.00 per contract.
重要ポイント
- Tesla CFDs use a contract size of 1 share per lot. That makes the pip value formula unusually clean compared to forex pa...
- A single data point makes this concrete. Suppose TSLA is trading at $245.00 and you buy 50 contracts with a stop-loss pl...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for TSLA CFDs
Tesla CFDs use a contract size of 1 share per lot. That makes the pip value formula unusually clean compared to forex pairs.
The formula is:
Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots
For TSLA: 0.01 × 1 × 1 = $0.01 per lot at the pip level — but because TSLA is quoted in USD and your account is in USD, the effective pip value scales to $1.00 per standard lot when expressed per full point of price movement. Each 0.01 move in TSLA's price equals exactly $0.01 per contract, with no currency conversion required.
Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills TSLA's contract size and pip value, so you skip the manual lookup entirely. The typical spread on TSLA CFDs sits at 1 pip, meaning you're starting each trade $0.01 per contract in the hole — small, but worth factoring into your break-even price.
2TSLA Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position
A single data point makes this concrete. Suppose TSLA is trading at $245.00 and you buy 50 contracts with a stop-loss placed 200 pips (200 × 0.01 = $2.00) below entry at $243.00.
Risk per contract = 200 pips × $0.01 = $2.00 Total risk = $2.00 × 50 contracts = $100.00
That $100 maximum loss is your defined risk before the position opens — not an estimate after the fact. Flip the scenario: a 200-pip profit target at $247.00 returns the same $100 on 50 contracts, giving you a clean 1:1 risk-reward ratio to evaluate.
Now adjust position size to risk exactly $250 on the same 200-pip stop. You need 125 contracts (250 ÷ 2.00 = 125). The fixed pip value of $0.01 makes this arithmetic fast and precise, which is exactly why stock CFDs appeal to traders who prefer round-number risk calculations.

リスク警告
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