DAX 40 (GER40) Pip Value Calculator Guide
— GER40
| 1 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| 1 | |
| 1.5 pips |
You're sizing a DAX 40 position and the index is sitting at 18,450. One wrong assumption about pip value and your risk calculation is off before the trade even opens. On GER40, the math is clean — but only if you know the exact contract specs.
- The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For GER40, pip size is 1 full ind...
- Here's a trade from the March 2024 ECB rate decision week, when GER40 swung 180 points in a single session. A trader ent...
- A €1 pip value sounds modest. It isn't. DAX 40 regularly moves 100–200 points on high-impact European data releases — th...
1How to Calculate DAX 40 Pip Value
The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For GER40, pip size is 1 full index point and contract size is 1. That means each lot produces exactly €1 per point of movement. Run the numbers: 1 × 1 × lots = pip value in euros. Scale to 5 lots and every point move is worth €5. No currency conversion needed when your account is denominated in euros — the value is direct. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills the GER40 contract size and pip value, so you skip the manual lookup entirely.
2GER40 Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position
Here's a trade from the March 2024 ECB rate decision week, when GER40 swung 180 points in a single session. A trader enters long at 17,820 with a 50-point stop-loss and 3 lots. Risk calculation: 50 points × €1 × 3 lots = €150 total risk. The target sits 120 points above entry at 17,940. Potential reward: 120 × €1 × 3 = €360. That's a 2.4:1 reward-to-risk ratio before spread costs. The typical GER40 spread of 1.5 points adds €4.50 to the cost of the trade at 3 lots — small but real. Subtract that from the reward and the ratio holds at roughly 2.37:1. Knowing the exact pip value made that calculation take under 10 seconds.
“A €1 pip value sounds modest.”
3Why Pip Value Defines Your DAX Position Sizing
A €1 pip value sounds modest. It isn't. DAX 40 regularly moves 100–200 points on high-impact European data releases — that's €100–€200 per lot, per trade. At 10 lots, a 150-point adverse move costs €1,500. Position sizing without knowing this number is guesswork. The practical approach: decide your maximum risk per trade in euros first, then divide by (stop-loss in points × pip value) to get your correct lot size. If your risk budget is €300 and your stop is 60 points, the math gives you exactly 5 lots. This method scales cleanly on GER40 because the €1 pip value keeps the arithmetic simple. Prop firm traders especially benefit here — DAX's volatility can breach daily drawdown limits fast if lot sizing is imprecise.
Q1What is the pip value for one lot of DAX 40 (GER40)?
One lot of GER40 has a pip value of €1 per index point, based on a contract size of 1 and pip size of 1. A 100-point move on a single lot equals exactly €100 in profit or loss.
Q2Does the DAX 40 pip value change with account currency?
If your account is denominated in euros, the pip value stays at €1 per point per lot with no conversion. For USD-denominated accounts, the value fluctuates with the EUR/USD rate — at 1.08, that €1 becomes approximately $1.08 per point.
