USDIDR Pip Value Calculator | USD/IDR Trading
— USDIDR
| 1 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $0.006 |
| 100,000 | |
| 30 pips |
The USDIDR pair carries a pip value of just $0.006 per standard lot — one of the lowest among major USD pairs — yet its typical spread of 30 pips means entering a trade costs $0.18 before price moves a single tick in your favor. Understanding these numbers precisely separates disciplined position sizing from guesswork.
- The standard pip value formula is: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Exchange Rate. For USDIDR, with a pip size o...
- Counterintuitively, a 100-pip move on USDIDR generates only $0.60 profit or loss on a single standard lot — a fraction o...
- Risk management on exotic pairs like USDIDR fails most often because traders apply position-sizing rules calibrated for ...
1How to Calculate USDIDR Pip Value
The standard pip value formula is: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Exchange Rate. For USDIDR, with a pip size of 1 and contract size of 100,000 units, the calculation anchors to the current USD/IDR rate. At a rate of approximately 16,000 IDR per USD, the result is (1 × 100,000) / 16,000 = $6.25 per pip in IDR terms — but since the quote currency is IDR and the account is denominated in USD, the conversion yields approximately $0.006 per pip per standard lot. This figure shifts with every rate movement, making real-time recalculation essential. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this automatically, pulling live contract size and pip value data directly into the panel so position sizing requires no manual arithmetic.
2USDIDR Pip Value: A Worked Example with Real Numbers
Counterintuitively, a 100-pip move on USDIDR generates only $0.60 profit or loss on a single standard lot — a fraction of what the same move produces on EUR/USD ($10.00). Consider a trader entering long at 16,000 with a 200-pip stop-loss. Risk exposure: 200 × $0.006 = $1.20 per lot. To risk $100 on that trade, the position would require approximately 83 standard lots. This dynamic makes USDIDR attractive for traders testing strategies with tight capital constraints, but the 30-pip spread ($0.18 entry cost per lot) still represents 15% of a 200-pip move's gross value — a meaningful drag. Calculating lot size before entry, not after, is the practical implication here.
“Risk management on exotic pairs like USDIDR fails most often because traders apply position-sizing rules calibrated for majors.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Your Real Risk on USDIDR
Risk management on exotic pairs like USDIDR fails most often because traders apply position-sizing rules calibrated for majors. A 1% account risk rule on a $10,000 account allows $100 of exposure. On EUR/USD with a 50-pip stop, that means 2 lots. On USDIDR with the same 50-pip stop, the math changes entirely: 50 × $0.006 = $0.30 per lot, allowing 333 lots for the same $100 risk. The spread cost compounds this — at 30 pips and $0.006 per pip, each lot costs $0.18 to enter, so 333 lots carries $59.94 in immediate spread costs, consuming 60% of the risk budget before price moves. According to standard risk management frameworks documented by the CME Group as of 2023, spread-to-stop ratios above 20% significantly reduce a strategy's expected value. Verify spread conditions with your broker during peak liquidity hours, typically 08:00–12:00 WIB (Western Indonesian Time), when USDIDR tends to show tighter bid-ask ranges.
