
π·Pip ααΊααΆα―αααΆαααααΆαααααααααΎααΎααααΈαααα αΆαααΈααΆαααααΆααααααΌαααααααααΆαααΌαα·ααααααααΈαααααΌααΌαα·ααααααααΆαα½αα Pip ααΆαααΆααααααααΆααΆααΆα’αααααααααΆ “percentage in point” α¬ “price interest point”α Pip ααΆααααααΆααΊααΆαααααααααΆαα α»ααααααααααααααααααα α αΎαααΆααΊααΆααΆααααααααααα½ααααααααΌα αααα»ααααα»αα’ααααΆααααΌαααααΆααα
α§ααΆα αααα ααΌααΌαα·ααααααααΆαα αααΎαααααΌαααΆααααααααΆαααααααΆααα½αααααα α αΎαααααααα½α pip ααΊααΆαααααααααΆαααΈαα½αααααα (α .α α α α‘)α α§ααΆα ααα ααααα·αααΎααΌα EUR/USD ααΆααααααααααα½ααααααααΈ α‘.α‘α¨α α αα α‘.α‘α¨α α₯ αααααΆααααααΆααΌαααααΎαα‘αΎααααααααΆα α₯ pipα
ααααααΆαααΆααααα ααΆαααααΈααΎαααααα½αα ααα½α ααΌα ααΆααΌααααΆαααααααααα»α αααααααΌαααΆααααααααΆαααααααΆαααΈαααααα α αΎαααααααα½α pip ααΊααΆαααααααααΆαααΈααΈαααααα (α .α α‘)α α§ααΆα ααα ααααα·αααΎααΌα USD/JPY ααΆααααααααααα½ααααααααΈ α‘α‘α .α α αα α‘α‘α .α α₯ ααΆααααααΆααΌαααααΎαα‘αΎααααααααΆα α₯ pip ααΌα ααααΆαααα
π₯ααΆαααΆαααααααα α’ααααΈ αααΆααΈα ααΎααααΈααα½αααΆαααΆαα·ααΆααΆα αααΎαααα!
β¬English Belowβ¬

π·Pip is a unit of measurement used to express the change in value between two currencies in a currency pair. Pip stands for percentage in point or price interest point. A pip is usually the last decimal place of a price quote, and it is the smallest price move that an exchange rate can make.
For example: Most currency pairs are quoted to four decimal places, and a single pip is the fourth decimal place (0.0001). For instance, if the EUR/USD pair moves from 1.1800 to 1.1805, that is a 5-pip increase.
However, there are some exceptions, such as Japanese yen pairs, which are quoted to two decimal places, and a single pip is the second decimal place (0.01). For example, if the USD/JPY pair moves from 110.00 to 110.05, that is a 5-pip increase.
π₯Follow STMarket page for more!