The Trading MentorMentor dagangan anda

EURJPY Pip Value Calculator – EUR/JPY Guide

··

EURJPY

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

$0.15
$0.45
$9.90
$118.80

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

The pip value for EUR/JPY is $6.67 per standard lot — a figure that shifts every time the USD/JPY exchange rate moves. Unlike pairs quoted in USD, EURJPY pip values require a currency conversion step that many traders overlook. Getting this number right is the foundation of accurate position sizing.

  • The standard formula is: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Current Exchange Rate, then converted to your account ...
  • A $6.67 pip value sounds abstract until it's applied to an actual trade. Assume a trader opens one standard lot (100,000...
  • Most traders decide position size first and check risk second. Research from proprietary trading firms consistently show...
1

How to Calculate EURJPY Pip Value

The standard formula is: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Current Exchange Rate, then converted to your account currency via USD/JPY. For EURJPY, the pip size is 0.01 and the contract size is 100,000 units. That gives a numerator of 1,000 JPY per pip. Dividing by the prevailing USD/JPY rate converts the result into US dollars. At a USD/JPY rate of approximately 150.00, that calculation yields roughly $6.67 per pip on a standard lot. The value fluctuates daily — a USD/JPY move from 145 to 155 shifts the EURJPY pip value by nearly $0.45 per pip. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this conversion automatically, pulling live contract size and pip value data so the figure updates in real time.

2

EURJPY Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position

A $6.67 pip value sounds abstract until it's applied to an actual trade. Assume a trader opens one standard lot (100,000 units) on EURJPY with a 30-pip stop-loss. Maximum risk on that trade: 30 × $6.67 = $200.10. With a $10,000 account and a 2% risk rule, the allowable loss is $200 — meaning a single standard lot nearly maxes out that threshold at 30 pips. Scaling to a mini lot (10,000 units) drops the pip value to $0.667, capping the same 30-pip stop at just $20.01. The typical spread on EURJPY runs around 1.5 pips, which costs $10.01 to cross on entry for a standard lot. That spread cost alone represents 5% of the $200 risk budget in this example — a meaningful drag on short-term strategies.

Most traders decide position size first and check risk second.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Position Size — Not the Other Way Around

Most traders decide position size first and check risk second. Research from proprietary trading firms consistently shows that inverted approach is a primary driver of account drawdown. The correct sequence: define maximum dollar risk, divide by (stop-loss in pips × pip value), then arrive at lot size. For EURJPY at $6.67 per pip, a trader risking $150 with a 20-pip stop should trade exactly 150 ÷ (20 × 6.67) = 1.12 lots. Rounding to 1.1 lots keeps risk within tolerance. Because EURJPY pip value changes with USD/JPY, recalculating before each trade — rather than using a memorized figure from weeks ago — prevents silent risk creep. A 10-point swing in USD/JPY changes your effective risk by roughly 6.5% on any open EURJPY position sized without adjustment.

Q1Why does the EURJPY pip value change over time?

EURJPY is quoted in Japanese Yen, so each pip is worth a fixed amount in JPY (1,000 JPY per pip on a standard lot). Converting that to USD requires dividing by the current USD/JPY rate, which fluctuates continuously. A stronger yen — meaning a lower USD/JPY rate — actually increases the dollar pip value, while a weaker yen decreases it.