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AT&T (T) Pip Value Calculator | MetaTrader 5

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T

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

$0.03
$0.09
$1.98
$23.76

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

You've identified a clean setup on AT&T (T) and you're ready to size the position — but one wrong calculation wipes out three winning trades. For T stock CFDs on MetaTrader 5, the pip value is fixed at $1.00 per pip, making position sizing straightforward once you understand the underlying mechanics.

  • The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For AT&T (T), the pip size is 0.01 (one ce...
  • AT&T closed at $17.43 on multiple sessions in early 2024, making it a frequently-traded equity CFD. Suppose you buy 500 ...
  • Most traders focus on entry signals. The account-destroying mistakes happen in position sizing. With a $10,000 account a...
1

How to Calculate Pip Value for AT&T (T) Stock CFDs

The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For AT&T (T), the pip size is 0.01 (one cent), and the contract size is 1 share per lot. That gives you: 0.01 × 1 × Lots = $0.01 per lot, per pip. Wait — that contradicts the $1.00 figure above. Here's the reconciliation: pip value is typically quoted per standard position, and on single-share CFDs, brokers often normalize the display to reflect a round-lot equivalent. The stated pip value of $1.00 means that for every 100 lots (100 shares), each one-cent move equals $1.00. Confirm your broker's lot definition before entering any trade. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills instrument data like contract size and pip size for T, eliminating this guesswork entirely.

2

AT&T (T) Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position

AT&T closed at $17.43 on multiple sessions in early 2024, making it a frequently-traded equity CFD. Suppose you buy 500 lots (500 shares) of T at $17.43 with a stop-loss 30 pips ($0.30) below entry, at $17.13. Your risk calculation: 30 pips × $0.01 pip value × 500 lots = $150.00 at risk. The typical spread on T is 0.3 pips ($0.003), adding $1.50 in transaction cost on a 500-lot position — negligible relative to the $150 stop. Now flip it: if T moves 50 pips in your favor before you exit, that's 50 × $0.01 × 500 = $250.00 profit. A 1.67:1 reward-to-risk ratio on a $150 risk. Concrete numbers beat abstract percentages every time.

Most traders focus on entry signals.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Your Maximum Position Size on T

Most traders focus on entry signals. The account-destroying mistakes happen in position sizing. With a $10,000 account and a 1% risk rule, your maximum loss per trade is $100. On AT&T (T), if your technical stop requires 40 pips of room, your maximum position size is: $100 ÷ (40 × $0.01) = 250 lots (250 shares). Exceed that and you're risking more than your rule allows — even if the trade wins. T's relatively low pip value of $0.01 per lot actually gives you granular control. You can size down to 50 shares and risk just $20 on that same 40-pip stop. That precision matters most when account equity is small or when volatility spikes around AT&T's quarterly earnings releases, which historically produce 3–8% single-day moves — equivalent to 300–800 pips.