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How To Calculate Leverage

The document discusses how to calculate leverage and position size based on account details. It provides a step-by-step process for determining leverage given a position size and account currency/value. It also outlines how to calculate position size based on a stop loss amount in pips and a risk percentage or dollar amount. Examples provided at the end illustrate these calculations for different currency pairs and account scenarios.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
160 views4 pages

How To Calculate Leverage

The document discusses how to calculate leverage and position size based on account details. It provides a step-by-step process for determining leverage given a position size and account currency/value. It also outlines how to calculate position size based on a stop loss amount in pips and a risk percentage or dollar amount. Examples provided at the end illustrate these calculations for different currency pairs and account scenarios.
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How to calculate leverage

In this section, I'll show you how to effectively calculate your account's leverage. It really depends
how you have it set with your broker. But to see if we can open a position of a given size on our
account, it is recommended to use the following procedure.

What we need to know:

The currency pair we want to trade

The size of the position

Procedure

Each currency pair is composed of two currencies - base and quote. The base currency is the first one
and the quotation currency is the second one.

So for EUR/USD the base currency is EUR and the quotation currency is USD
For AUD/GBP the base currency is AUD and the quotation currency is GBP

As soon as we know our base and quotation currency, we can do the calculation.

1. Set the position size

The size of the position is calculated from the base currency. For most contracts, a position size of 1
lot is 100,000 units of the base currency. So if we have 0.1 lots of EUR/USD, it will be 10,000 EUR, if
0.1 AUD/GBP, it will be 10,000 AUD etc.

2. Determine the value of the position in the currency of our account

If we have an account in USD, we need to recalculate the position size into USD, if it is in EUR, we
recalculate it into EUR, etc.

The easiest way is to use Google, for example "convert 10,000 EUR to USD", "exchange 10,000 AUD
to EUR", etc.

3. Calculate the leverage

Let's say we have a $ 1,000 account and we buy 0.15 AUD/GBP lots. The procedure will be simple.

The 0.15 AUD/GBP lots has a value of 0.15 X 100,000 AUD = 15,000 AUD.

After converting into USD, the value of the "15,000 AUD into USD" contract in Google is 11,634.6
USD.

The leverage will be: $ 11,634.6 USD positions per 1,000 USD account = 11.6: 1 is the leverage size.

As you can see it is not difficult. Try to work out these examples (for the correct answers, look at
the end of this document):

0.1 lot EUR/GBP on a EUR 1,500 account

0.22 lots GBP/CAD on a 35,000 CZK account

1.16 lots USDJPY on a GBP 12,600 account

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Determining the position according to the stop loss size
In this section we will show you another simple calculation - how to determine the size of a trading
position by the size of the stop loss.

What we need to know:

The SL size in pips

How many USD we want to risk in one trade OR the account size and risk per trade in percentage
terms

Procedure:

There is more than one way to calculate it, but I will show you the two basic ones, you can easily
work out the others.

Procedure 1: I have the SL in pips and I know how much USD I want to risk (it can be another currency
instead of USD, but always take the risk currency according to the currency of your account)

1. The point value in USD (or another account currency)

We use the quote currency to calculate the point value. So for EUR/USD, the value of the pip is in
USD and for AUD/GBP it will be GBP. For the vast majority of pairs, the pip value is 10 units of the
quote currency. For EUR/USD it will be 10 USD, for AUD/GBP it will be 10 GBP, etc.

If I know that I want the SL to be 20 pips with a risk of 60 USD, I have to calculate what the value of
the point in USD would be. For EUR/USD it is easy, the value is automatically in USD. For AUD/GBP,
the point value will be in GBP, here I use Google again and I find that the result is that GBP 10 to USD
is 14.24 USD.

2. I calculate the position size

I know that I want to risk 60 USD for SL 20 pips. This means that a 1 pip move for me will be:

60 USD divided by 20 pips = 3 USD

Now I know that for my risk setting the move by 1 pip will mean a 3 USD profit or loss. The
calculation of the position is now easy:

For EUR/USD: 3 USD divided by 10 USD = 0.3 lots


For AUD/GBP: 3 USD divided by 14.24 USD = 0.21 lots

You can see for yourselves that to get the same risk per trade, the position size for different currency
pairs differs. But again, the calculation is quite easy.

Here I know the size of the account and the risk in %, so I calculate the value of the SL in the
currency of the account, i.e. if the account is USD 1,000 and I want to risk 3%, the risk would be
1.000 X 0,03 = 30 USD. And then I continue according to the procedure above.

As you can see, it’s not difficult. Try to calculate the following exercises (the risk is in the currency of
the account, and you will find the results at the end of the document):

SL 15 pips and a risk of 25 USD for a USD/CAD currency pair

SL 50 pips and a risk of 500 CZK for a AUD/CHF currency pair

SL 30 pips and a risk of GBP 20 for a EUR/GBP currency pair

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Determination of leverage size for trading
with a defined risk
The last calculation is a combination of the previous ones.

Let's say I have:

1000 EUR account

SL 25 pips

Risk 2%

Currency pair AUD/CHF

Procedure:

1. Set the position size

The risk will be 2% of 1000 EUR = 20 EUR

The point value is 10 CHF = 8.81 EUR

I'll take a risk of 1 pip: 20 EUR divided by 25 pips = 0.8 EUR

Position size: 0.8 EUR divided by 8.81 EUR = 0.09 lots

2. Set the leverage

0.09 lots AUD/CHF contract, the position value is 100,000 X 0.09 = 9,000 AUD

9,000 AUD to EUR = 5,629.63 EUR

5,629.63 EUR value of the size of the position to 1000 EUR account

5,629.63 divided by 1,000 = 5.63: 1 is the effective leverage size

As you can see, there are two very simple calculations and we get to the same result. It's true that
you can find a calculator on the Internet for these calculations. But as a trader, you should know
them. It will give you an idea of what affects the development of profits and losses in your trading.

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The results of the exercises
Leverage calculation:

0.1 lots EUR/GBP lot on a EUR 1,500 account

0.1 X 100,000 EUR = 10,000 EUR


The value is in EUR, so we do not need to recalculate it into your
account currency Leverage: 10,000 : 1,500 = 6.66 : 1

0.22 lots GBP/CAD on a 35,000 CZK account

0.22 X 100,000 GBP = 22,000 GBP


22,000 GBP to CZK = 643.744 CZK
Leverage: 643,744 : 35,000 = 18.39: 1

1.16 lots USD/JPY on a 12,600 GBP account

1.16 X 100,000 USD = 116,000 USD


116,000 USD to GBP = 81,449 GBP
Leverage: 81,449 : 12,600 = 6,46 : 1

Position size calculation:

SL 15 pips and a risk of 25 USD for a USD/CAD currency pair

Pip value: 10 CAD = 7.94 USD


Pip value for risk calculation: 25 USD divided by 15 pips = $ 1.67
Position size: 1.67 USD divided by 7.94 USD = 0.21 lots

SL 50 pips and a risk of 500 CZK for a AUD/CHF currency pair

Point value: 10 CHF = 213 CZK


Pip value for risk calculation: 500 CZK divided by 50 pips = 10 CZK
Position size: 10 CZK divided by 213 CZK = 0.04 lots

SL 30 pips and a risk of GBP 20 for a EUR/GBP currency pair

Point value: 10 GBP we do not have to recalculate


Pip value for risk calculation: GBP 20 divided by 30 pips = GBP 0.67
Position size: 0.67 GBP divided by 10 GBP = 0.06 lots

If anything is unclear, let us know at info@quastic.com

www.quastic.com

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