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JD.com (JD) Pip Value Calculator | Pulsar

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JD

0.01
Pip Value (1 lot)$1
1
0.4 pips

$0.04
$0.12
$2.64
$31.68

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

JD.com (JD) trades with a pip size of 0.01 and a contract size of 1 — meaning each pip move equals exactly $1.00 per contract. Get the numbers right before you size a position, because a miscalculated pip value turns a planned 1% risk into something else entirely.

  • The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. For JD, that's 0.01 × 1 = $1.00 per pip, per contr...
  • Here's a concrete setup. JD is trading at $38.50. You want to risk $500 on a long trade with a stop-loss 25 pips below e...
  • Most traders set a stop-loss in price terms and forget to verify what that distance costs in dollars. That's the gap bet...
1

How to Calculate Pip Value for JD.com (JD)

The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. For JD, that's 0.01 × 1 = $1.00 per pip, per contract. If your account is denominated in USD, no currency conversion is needed — the math stays clean. Scale up to 5 contracts and each pip is worth $5.00. Scale to 10 and you're at $10.00 per pip. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills JD's contract size and pip value directly from instrument data, so you skip the manual lookup entirely. The formula never changes for this instrument, but position size does — and that's where the real calculation work begins.

2

JD.com Pip Value Example: Sizing a $500 Risk Trade

Here's a concrete setup. JD is trading at $38.50. You want to risk $500 on a long trade with a stop-loss 25 pips below entry, at $38.25. Each pip is worth $1.00. Risk per contract = 25 pips × $1.00 = $25.00. To risk exactly $500, you'd trade 20 contracts ($500 ÷ $25). Factor in the typical spread of 0.4 pips — that's $0.40 slippage cost at entry per contract, or $8.00 across 20 contracts. Not catastrophic, but worth including in your pre-trade math. JD saw significant volatility through 2023 and into 2024, with intraday swings regularly exceeding 50–80 pips, so stop placement precision matters more than it might on a slower-moving instrument.

Most traders set a stop-loss in price terms and forget to verify what that distance costs in dollars.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Whether Your Risk Management Actually Works

Most traders set a stop-loss in price terms and forget to verify what that distance costs in dollars. That's the gap between a risk plan and actual risk control. With JD at $1.00 per pip, a 100-pip stop costs $100 per contract. A 200-pip stop doubles that exposure. If your account is $10,000 and your rule is 1% risk per trade, your maximum loss is $100 — meaning a 100-pip stop allows exactly 1 contract. Two contracts would push you to 2% risk. The math is unforgiving. Knowing the pip value in advance lets you reverse-engineer position size from your risk limit, rather than guessing and adjusting after the fact. That's the difference between a trading plan and a trading hope.

Q1What is the pip value for JD.com (JD) in MT5?

JD.com has a pip size of 0.01 and a contract size of 1, giving a pip value of exactly $1.00 per contract. This assumes a USD-denominated account with no currency conversion required.

Q2How does the spread affect my JD.com trade cost?

JD's typical spread is 0.4 pips, which equals $0.40 per contract at entry. On a 10-contract trade, that's $4.00 in immediate cost before price moves a single pip in your favor — factor this into your breakeven calculation.