EURNOK Pip Value Calculator | EUR/NOK Trading
— EURNOK
| 0.0001 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $0.95 |
| 100,000 | |
| 15 pips |
You've sized your EURNOK position, set your stop-loss at 50 pips, and hit buy — but do you know exactly how much money that stop represents? With EUR/NOK's 15-pip typical spread eating into entries before the trade even moves, imprecise pip value calculations can quietly destroy a risk management plan. This page gives you the exact numbers for a standard EURNOK contract.
- The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Exchange Rate. For EURNOK, the pip size is 0.00...
- Here's a fact that surprises many traders: EURNOK's 15-pip typical spread costs you $14.25 in spread alone on a standard...
- Risk management starts with one number: the maximum dollar amount you're willing to lose on a single trade. Everything e...
1How to Calculate EURNOK Pip Value
The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Exchange Rate. For EURNOK, the pip size is 0.0001 and the contract size is 100,000 units. At a rate of approximately 11.80 (where EUR/NOK traded in early 2024), that calculation looks like this: (0.0001 × 100,000) / 11.80 = roughly $0.85 per pip in EUR terms — but because your account is likely denominated in USD or EUR, the broker converts this automatically. The standardized pip value for EURNOK lands at $0.95 per pip on a standard lot. Mini lots (10,000 units) produce $0.095 per pip. Micro lots (1,000 units) produce $0.0095 per pip. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this conversion automatically, pulling the contract size and current pip value directly from the instrument so you never calculate manually mid-trade.
2EURNOK Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Risk
Here's a fact that surprises many traders: EURNOK's 15-pip typical spread costs you $14.25 in spread alone on a standard lot before price moves a single tick in your favor. Run the math — 15 pips × $0.95 = $14.25. Now build a full trade scenario. You open one standard lot of EURNOK, targeting 100 pips of profit with a 50-pip stop-loss. Your reward equals 100 × $0.95 = $95.00. Your risk equals 50 × $0.95 = $47.50. That gives a clean 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio. Add the spread cost back in and your effective risk rises to $61.75 ($47.50 + $14.25), while your effective reward drops to $80.75 ($95.00 − $14.25). The ratio compresses to approximately 1.3:1 — still positive, but meaningfully different from the raw pip calculation. Accounting for spread before entering wide-spread pairs like EURNOK is not optional; it's the difference between a viable strategy and a marginal one.
“Risk management starts with one number: the maximum dollar amount you're willing to lose on a single trade.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Your Position Size on EURNOK
Risk management starts with one number: the maximum dollar amount you're willing to lose on a single trade. Everything else — lot size, stop distance, position count — flows from that anchor. Say your account holds $10,000 and your rule is to risk 1% per trade, meaning $100 maximum loss. With a 50-pip stop on EURNOK and a pip value of $0.95, one standard lot risks $47.50. That means you could theoretically trade two standard lots ($95.00 risk) and stay within your $100 limit. Alternatively, if your technical stop requires 100 pips, one standard lot already risks $95.00 — nearly your full 1% allocation. The pip value acts as a scaling factor connecting your stop-loss distance to real dollar exposure. Without it, position sizing is guesswork. With it, every trade has a defined, calculated risk before execution.
