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BRA50 Pip Value Calculator – Bovespa 50 Index

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BRA50

1
Pip Value (1 lot)$1
1
50 pips

$5.00
$15.00
$330.00
$3960.00

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

The BRA50 (Bovespa 50 Index) carries a fixed pip value of 1 and a typical spread of 50 pips — meaning you're already down $50 the moment a position opens. Knowing this upfront changes how you size every trade.

  • The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For BRA50, pip size is 1 and cont...
  • Counterintuitive fact: a 50-pip spread on BRA50 costs the same in dollar terms as a 0.5-pip spread on EUR/USD at standar...
  • Risk management on index CFDs like BRA50 breaks down into three numbers: pip value, stop distance, and lot size. Get one...
1

How to Calculate BRA50 Pip Value

The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For BRA50, pip size is 1 and contract size is 1, so each lot produces a pip value of exactly $1. One lot, one pip, one dollar. That clean ratio makes position sizing arithmetic simple — 10 lots gives you $10 per pip, 50 lots gives you $50 per pip. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills BRA50's contract size and pip value, so you skip manual lookups entirely. The only variable you control is lot size, which feeds directly into your dollar-per-pip exposure.

2

BRA50 Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Risk

Counterintuitive fact: a 50-pip spread on BRA50 costs the same in dollar terms as a 0.5-pip spread on EUR/USD at standard lot — both hit you for $50. Here's a concrete example. You open 5 lots on BRA50. Pip value = 1 × 1 × 5 = $5 per pip. Your stop-loss sits 100 pips below entry. Maximum risk = $5 × 100 = $500. The spread alone (50 pips × $5) costs $250 before the market moves a single tick in your favor. That entry cost is not trivial. On a $10,000 account, that spread represents 2.5% of capital consumed at the open — before any adverse price action. Size accordingly.

Risk management on index CFDs like BRA50 breaks down into three numbers: pip value, stop distance, and lot size.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Your Actual Risk on BRA50

Risk management on index CFDs like BRA50 breaks down into three numbers: pip value, stop distance, and lot size. Get one wrong and your stated risk percentage is fiction. With a $1 pip value per lot, a 200-pip stop on 10 lots equals $2,000 at risk — 20% of a $10,000 account. That's account-ending territory on a single trade. Since 2020, Brazilian equity volatility has regularly produced 300–500 pip intraday swings on BRA50, making wide stops tempting but dangerous at higher lot sizes. The practical fix: define your maximum dollar risk first (say, $200 on a $10,000 account), then back-calculate your lot size. At a 100-pip stop, $200 risk ÷ $100 stop value = 2 lots maximum. Position size is the output, not the starting point.

Q1What is the pip value for one lot of BRA50?

One lot of BRA50 has a pip value of exactly $1. With a contract size of 1 and pip size of 1, each pip movement equals $1 profit or loss per lot traded.

Q2How does the 50-pip BRA50 spread affect my trade cost?

At 1 lot, the 50-pip spread costs $50 per round trip. At 10 lots, that entry cost rises to $500 — paid immediately on position open. Factor this into your minimum profit target before entering any BRA50 trade.