CrowdStrike (CRWD) Pip Value Calculator
获取 Pulsar Terminal 进行高级仓位计算点值 — CRWD
| Pip大小 | 0.01 |
| 点值(1手) | $1 |
| 合约大小 | 1 |
| 典型点差 | 0.8 pips |
交易工具
计算 CRWD 的交易成本和仓位大小
点差成本计算器
基于标准外汇手数($10/点)的估算成本。实际成本因品种和市场状况而异。
仓位大小计算器
根据您的风险管理计算最佳手数
基于标准外汇手数($10/点)。请针对不同品种进行调整,并务必与经纪商确认。
CrowdStrike Holdings (CRWD) trades as a CFD with a pip size of 0.01 and a fixed pip value of $1 per contract — meaning every cent the price moves equals exactly $1 in profit or loss. That fixed relationship makes position sizing straightforward, but only if you know how to apply it. Here's the full breakdown.
要点总结
- Pip value answers one question: how much money changes hands for each minimum price movement? For CRWD, the formula is: ...
- Assume CRWD is trading at $320.00 and you buy 50 contracts. The typical spread is 0.8 pips (0.008 in price terms), so yo...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for CRWD
Pip value answers one question: how much money changes hands for each minimum price movement? For CRWD, the formula is:
Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Lots
With CRWD's contract size of 1 and a pip size of 0.01, a single lot produces:
0.01 × 1 × 1 = $0.01 per pip
Wait — that's $0.01, not $1. The stated pip value of $1 assumes the instrument is quoted in a way that normalizes to whole-dollar increments. On most CFD platforms, CRWD price moves are tracked in full cent increments (0.01), and each such move on one contract equals $0.01. Scale to 100 contracts and that becomes $1 per pip. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this automatically, pulling contract size and pip value directly from the instrument specification so you never miscalculate your exposure. Always confirm your broker's contract specification, since lot sizing conventions varied across platforms after the 2020–2021 surge in retail equity CFD offerings.
2CRWD Pip Value Example: From Price to Dollar Risk
Assume CRWD is trading at $320.00 and you buy 50 contracts. The typical spread is 0.8 pips (0.008 in price terms), so your entry fill is effectively $320.008 on the ask.
You set a stop-loss 200 pips below entry — that's $2.00 in price movement, placing your stop at $318.00.
Dollar risk = Pip Value × Pips at Risk × Contracts = $0.01 × 200 × 50 = $100
Your maximum loss on this trade is $100. Now flip it: if you want to risk exactly $250 on a 200-pip stop, you need 125 contracts (250 ÷ (0.01 × 200) = 125). The math runs in both directions. That bidirectional calculation is what separates disciplined sizing from guesswork.

风险提示
金融工具交易存在重大风险,可能不适合所有投资者。过往业绩不代表未来表现。本内容仅供教育目的,不构成投资建议。在交易前请务必自行研究。