Your first week trading currencies, you'll notice traders casually mention "I grabbed 50 pips on EUR/USD" like everyone understands what that means. If you're nodding along while secretly confused, you're not alone—pips baffle nearly every beginner who steps into forex.
Here's what matters: pips measure how much a currency pair's price moves. Think of them like inches on a ruler, except this ruler measures money entering or leaving your trading account. Get comfortable calculating pips, or you'll be guessing how much you're actually risking on each trade.
In forex, a pip tracks the tiniest standardized shift in exchange rates between two currencies. You can't wing it here—position sizing, setting stop losses, and counting your profits all depend on pip math. Try trading without understanding this, and you might as well be throwing darts blindfolded.
Most forex traders will tell you "pip" means "percentage in point," though some say "price interest point." Both explanations work. What actually matters is this: for major currency pairs, you're looking at the fourth number after the decimal. That's your pip.
Take EUR/USD trading at 1.0850. The pair climbs to 1.0851? That's a one-pip gain. Drops to 1.0849? One-pip loss. Simple enough once you know where to look.
Why does this measurement exist? Imagine trying to discuss forex movements without a standard unit. One trader talks in percentage terms, another uses raw decimal changes, a third references dollar a...