AMGN Pip Value Calculator – Amgen Inc. Trading
— AMGN
| 0.01 | |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| 1 | |
| 0.7 pips |
A trader enters an Amgen (AMGN) position and sets a 50-pip stop-loss — but without knowing the exact dollar cost of each pip, that stop is little more than a guess. For AMGN CFDs, the pip size is 0.01 and the contract size is 1, making precise pip value calculations both straightforward and essential for disciplined position sizing.
- The formula is direct: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. For Amgen, that means 0.01 × 1 = $0.01 per pip, per contrac...
- Amgen traded near $270 per share through much of 2024, giving traders a concrete anchor for these calculations. Assume a...
- Most traders set position size first and check risk second. Research on retail trading behavior consistently shows this ...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for AMGN Stock CFDs
The formula is direct: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size. For Amgen, that means 0.01 × 1 = $0.01 per pip, per contract. Scaling up changes the math quickly. Ten contracts produce a pip value of $0.10; one hundred contracts push it to $1.00 per pip. Because AMGN is quoted in USD, no currency conversion is required — the pip value lands directly in dollars. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills instrument data like contract size and pip size for AMGN, eliminating manual lookup errors before a trade is placed.
2AMGN Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Risk
Amgen traded near $270 per share through much of 2024, giving traders a concrete anchor for these calculations. Assume a position of 500 contracts with a 30-pip stop-loss. Pip value per contract = $0.01. Total pip value = 0.01 × 500 = $5.00. Maximum risk on the trade = $5.00 × 30 = $150. The typical spread for AMGN CFDs sits at 0.7 pips, costing $0.007 per contract at entry — negligible on small sizes, but $3.50 on that same 500-contract position. Factoring spread cost into the total risk figure gives a more accurate picture: $153.50 on this example trade, not $150.
“Most traders set position size first and check risk second.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Position Size, Not the Other Way Around
Most traders set position size first and check risk second. Research on retail trading behavior consistently shows this sequence leads to oversized losses relative to account equity. The correct sequence reverses it: define maximum acceptable loss, divide by pip value, then set position size. With AMGN's pip value of $0.01 per contract, a trader risking $200 on a 40-pip stop can hold a maximum of 500 contracts (200 ÷ (0.01 × 40) = 500). That calculation takes seconds. Skipping it can turn a planned 1% account risk into a 4% drawdown on a single trade — a gap that compounds painfully across a month of active trading.
Q1What is the pip value for one AMGN contract?
One AMGN contract has a pip value of $0.01, derived from a pip size of 0.01 multiplied by a contract size of 1. This figure scales linearly — 200 contracts produce a pip value of $2.00.
Q2How does the AMGN spread affect my trading cost?
AMGN carries a typical spread of 0.7 pips. At $0.01 per pip per contract, that equals $0.007 per contract in entry cost. On larger positions, this spread cost should be added to stop-loss calculations to avoid underestimating total trade risk.
