VALE Pip Value Calculator – Vale SA Trading Guide
— VALE
| 0.01 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| 1 | |
| 0.3 pips |
Vale SA (VALE), the Brazilian mining giant listed on NYSE, trades as a stock CFD with a pip value of exactly $1 — one of the cleaner calculations you'll encounter in equity CFDs. Unlike forex pairs where pip values shift with exchange rates, VALE's fixed contract size of 1 share per unit makes position sizing arithmetic straightforward.
- The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots. For VALE: Pip Size = 0.01, Contract Size ...
- Assume VALE is trading at $14.50 and you open a 50-lot position. Pip Value per lot = 0.01 × 1 = $0.01 × 100 (standard l...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for VALE Stock CFD
The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots.
For VALE: Pip Size = 0.01, Contract Size = 1, so one standard lot delivers $1 per pip — the pip size and contract size multiply to exactly 0.01 × 1 = 0.01 per share, then scaled by position size in lots.
Compared to a forex pair like EUR/USD — where pip value fluctuates based on the current exchange rate — VALE's pip value stays fixed in USD terms as long as your account is denominated in dollars. That predictability is a genuine advantage when pre-calculating risk before entry.
Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills VALE's contract size and pip value, eliminating manual lookup before every trade.
The spread on VALE sits at a typical 0.3 pips, meaning you're paying $0.30 per lot to enter. On a 10-lot position, that's $3.00 in spread cost — a concrete number worth factoring into your breakeven calculation before you click buy.
2Example Pip Value Calculation Using Real VALE Numbers
Assume VALE is trading at $14.50 and you open a 50-lot position.
Pip Value per lot = 0.01 × 1 = $0.01 × 100 (standard lot scaling) — wait, let's be precise. With Contract Size = 1 and Pip Size = 0.01, the raw pip value per single lot is $0.01 × 1 = $0.01. Scaled to 50 lots: $0.01 × 50 = $0.50 per pip move.
Now apply a 100-pip stop-loss (price moves from $14.50 to $13.50): Risk = 100 pips × $0.50 = $50.00 total.
Unlike trading crude oil CFDs — where a 100-pip move on a 10-lot position can expose $1,000+ — VALE's micro pip value makes it a lower-volatility instrument for position sizing purposes. Since 2020, VALE has seen daily ranges averaging 30–60 pips, so a 100-pip stop represents roughly 1.5–3 average daily ranges. That context shapes whether your stop is tight or generous relative to normal price behavior.
