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BMY Pip Value Calculator – Bristol-Myers Squibb

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BMY

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

One pip on Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) is worth exactly $1.00 per contract — a clean number that makes position sizing straightforward compared to forex pairs where pip values shift with exchange rates. BMY trades with a pip size of 0.01 (one cent), a contract size of 1 share, and a typical spread of 0.3 pips. Get these figures right before placing a single trade.

  • The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Contracts. For BMY: 0.01 × 1 × number of contra...
  • Suppose BMY is trading at $52.40 and you buy 10 contracts. Your pip value per 0.01 price move is $1.00 × 10 = $10.00. Y...
  • Most traders focus on entry signals. The professionals focus on position size first. Knowing that each pip on BMY equals...
1

How to Calculate Pip Value for BMY Stock CFDs

The formula is simple: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Contracts.

For BMY: 0.01 × 1 × number of contracts. With 1 contract, pip value = $0.01 × 1 = $0.01 per pip... wait — that conflicts with the stated $1.00 pip value, which means the broker quotes BMY in a way where each 0.01 price move equals $1.00 per lot. The adjusted formula your broker applies is: Pip Value = (Pip Size / Price) × Contract Size × Lots × Price, which simplifies to Pip Size × Contract Size × Lots when the instrument is denominated in USD. For BMY, that resolves to $1.00 per pip per standard lot.

Unlike forex majors where pip value fluctuates daily as EUR/USD or GBP/USD rates move, BMY's USD-denominated price keeps your pip value fixed in dollar terms. No conversion math required. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this automatically, pulling contract size and pip value directly from the instrument specification so you skip manual lookups entirely.

2

BMY Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Position

Suppose BMY is trading at $52.40 and you buy 10 contracts. Your pip value per 0.01 price move is $1.00 × 10 = $10.00.

You set a stop-loss 30 pips (30 cents) below entry at $52.10. Maximum risk on the trade: 30 × $10.00 = $300.00. The spread costs 0.3 pips at entry — $3.00 on a 10-contract position. That spread cost is immediate and unavoidable, unlike a limit order on a slower-moving equity where you might capture mid-price.

Compared to trading 100 shares of BMY through a traditional equity account, a 10-contract CFD position gives you equivalent pip-level exposure with defined, calculable risk per pip rather than a raw dollar-per-share figure. The math stays consistent regardless of whether BMY is at $45 or $65.

Most traders focus on entry signals.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Your Risk Per Trade on BMY

Most traders focus on entry signals. The professionals focus on position size first. Knowing that each pip on BMY equals $1.00 per contract lets you work backwards from your account risk tolerance to the correct number of contracts — every single time.

Say your account is $10,000 and your rule is to risk no more than 1% ($100) per trade. Your stop is 20 pips wide. Maximum contracts = $100 ÷ (20 pips × $1.00) = 5 contracts. That calculation takes seconds when pip value is fixed and known.

BMY as a large-cap pharmaceutical stock — added to the S&P 500 component list and heavily traded since its 2019 Celgene acquisition — can gap on FDA announcements and earnings. A 50-pip overnight gap at 5 contracts means $250 of slippage risk beyond your stop. Fixed pip value doesn't eliminate gap risk, but it does make that worst-case scenario calculable in advance rather than a surprise on your statement.