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Trading terms, in plain English

The words on the order ticket, explained — so you know exactly what you're doing before you click buy or sell. Every term links to a calculator that does the maths for you.

On the order ticket

Leverage Amplifier

Borrowed size. 10× leverage means $100 of your money controls a $1,000 position. It multiplies both profit and loss by the same factor — the single fastest way to blow an account when it's too high.

Example: at 10× a 5% move in your favour = +50%; a 5% move against you = −50%.

Margin Your stake

The cash set aside to open a leveraged trade — your slice of the full position. Position size ÷ leverage. If the trade loses enough that margin can't cover it, it gets liquidated (force-closed).

Example: a $1,000 position at 10× needs $100 margin.

Pip Unit of move

The smallest standard price step in forex — the 4th decimal for most pairs (0.0001), the 2nd for JPY pairs (0.01). How profit, loss and spread are measured. Pip value depends on your position size.

Example: EUR/USD 1.1000 → 1.1001 is a 1-pip move; on 1 standard lot that's about $10.

Spread Cost of entry

The gap between the buy (ask) and sell (bid) price — what you pay to get in, before the market even moves. A trade starts slightly negative by the spread, so tight spreads matter most for short-term trading.

Example: buy at 1.1002, sell at 1.1000 → a 2-pip spread you must earn back first.

Risk : Reward The edge

How much you stand to make versus how much you'll lose if wrong — distance to your target ÷ distance to your stop. Aiming for at least 1:2 means you can be right less than half the time and still grow.

Example: risk 5 points to make 15 = 1:3. Win just 1 in 3 and you break even.
How the pros stay in the game

Position sizing by risk %

Decide the most you'll lose on any one trade — usually 1–2% of your balance — then let that and your stop distance set your size. Never the other way round. It's the habit that separates traders who last from those who don't.

Expectancy & drawdown

Expectancy is your average profit per trade over many trades — positive means an edge. Drawdown is how far your balance falls from its peak; small, controlled drawdowns are what let you survive losing streaks and compound.

Daily limits & discipline

Capping your daily loss and number of trades stops one bad session from becoming a disaster. Over-trading and revenge-trading after a loss are top account-killers — a hard stop protects you from yourself.

Educational reference only, not financial advice. Trading leveraged products carries a high risk of losing money quickly.