Pip value, position size, margin, P&L and compounding — priced in rand. No sign-up, no fluff.
Every tool runs in rand and recalculates as you type. Pick one to jump straight to it.
Size every position to a fixed % risk and stop-loss in pips.
Open →See the margin a trade locks up at 1:50 to 1:500 leverage.
Open →Model entry, exit and direction to project the rand outcome.
Open →Project account growth from a monthly return over time.
Open →Every forex position moves in pips, but your profit and loss lands in your account currency. If you trade a ZAR account, a 40-pip stop on USD/ZAR is a very different rand amount than the same stop on USD/JPY — and guessing is how accounts blow up.
Professionals decide how much they're willing to lose first, then work backwards to the lot size. A pip calculator turns "2% of R50,000 over a 40-pip stop" into an exact position size, so a single trade can never cost more than you planned.
Pip value changes with the pair, the lot size and the current exchange rate. Running the numbers lets you compare a setup on GBP/ZAR against one on EUR/USD using the one figure that matters: rand at risk per pip.
Leverage decides how much margin a trade locks up; your stop-loss decides how much you actually risk. Keeping the two separate — and checking both before entry — is the habit that keeps a trading account alive.