What action to take when you see a lot size
When a lot size appears in the FxPro order window, treat it as a risk decision, not just a trade size. First decide how much of the account balance can be lost on that one position, often 1-2% for South African traders. Then choose a stop-loss distance on the chart in pips and check that this stop level also makes sense technically. With these two numbers - money at risk and pips to stop - calculate the lot size so that a move from entry to stop equals no more than the planned rand loss. After that, place both the stop-loss and take-profit orders immediately based on a chosen risk-reward ratio, for example 1:2. Finally, confirm that the new trade keeps total risk across all open positions within a chosen limit, such as 5-10% of the account. Only after these checks should the order be sent.
A simple working sequence for each trade:
- Decide risk % of account (for example 1%).
- Convert this to rand risk.
- Choose stop-loss distance in pips.
- Pick lot size so pips x pip value = rand risk.
- Set stop-loss and take-profit.
- Check total risk across all open trades, then confirm.
What lot size represents on a forex platform
A lot is the standard unit used to show how many units of the base currency a trader is buying or selling. On FxPro, typical categories look like this:
| Lot type | Units of base currency |
|---|---|
| Standard lot | 100,000 units |
| Mini lot | 10,000 units |
| Micro lot | 1,000 units |
| Nano lot | 100 units |
The chosen lot size directly controls exposure: the larger the lot, the more money is gained or lost for each pip movement. Smaller lots reduce this pip value and make it easier to keep risk steady. For accounts funded in ZAR or for pairs that include the rand, this link between lot size, volatility and pip value is especially important, because sharp price swings can turn a large lot into a large rand move very quickly.
How to calculate risk allocation before picking a lot
Before touching the lot size field, set a fixed rule for maximum loss per trade. Many traders use the 1-2% rule. For example, with an account of 50,000 ZAR:
- 1% risk per trade = 500 ZAR
- 2% risk per trade = 1,000 ZAR
The basic formula is:
Account balance x chosen risk % = maximum rand risk per trade.
Keep this percentage stable across trades instead of changing it based on confidence in a setup. This rand risk number then guides:
- how far the stop-loss can be from entry
- how large the lot size can be
- whether multiple open positions together fit within an overall risk cap.
How to match lot size to balance, stop and leverage
Once the rand risk limit is known, combine it with the planned stop-loss distance. The goal is to find a lot size where:
stop-loss pips x pip value = rand risk.
Example structure:
- Account: 180,000 ZAR
- Risk per trade: 1% = 1,800 ZAR
- Planned stop-loss: 30 pips
The trader needs a lot size where 30 pips produce about 1,800 ZAR of loss if the stop is hit. Smaller lots will produce a smaller loss; larger lots will exceed the risk rule. Available leverage on FxPro shows how large a position can be controlled, but it does not mean that the largest possible lot is suitable. Using mini, micro or nano lots often makes it easier to fine-tune position size exactly to the desired risk.
Setting stop-loss and take-profit right after choosing the lot
After deciding on the lot size, the exit plan should be set immediately:
- Stop-loss: placed where both the money risk and chart structure are respected. For a long trade, this is often below a recent swing low; for a short trade, above a recent swing high.
- Take-profit: set using a fixed risk-reward ratio. A common choice is at least 1:2, so a 30-pip risk aims for 60 pips of potential gain.
These orders turn the planned risk and reward into automatic actions. When price touches either level, the platform closes the position without further input and reduces emotional interference.
Keeping lot size aligned with overall position sizing
Lot size should not be decided trade by trade in isolation. When several forex pairs are open at the same time, the combined risk matters more than the single-ticket size. A frequent approach is to keep total open risk within a band such as 5-10% of the account balance. In this case, if five trades are live, each one might use a 1-2% risk.
Some traders also adjust lot sizes between pairs:
- Smaller lot size on more volatile pairs, such as those involving ZAR.
- Standard or slightly larger lot size on more stable major pairs, while keeping the same percentage risk.
Account tools that show open exposure, margin use and unrealised profit or loss help check whether a new trade will push total risk above a chosen cap.
Typical lot size mistakes to avoid
Several recurring errors are linked directly to the lot field:
- Choosing lot size based on hoped-for profit instead of acceptable loss.
- Using the same lot size on every trade even when stop-loss distance changes.
- Ignoring account changes: not increasing lot size gradually as balance grows, or not cutting size when balance falls.
- Copying default or saved lot sizes without checking whether current volatility and stop levels still justify them.
A more robust habit is to recalculate the lot whenever the stop-loss distance or account balance changes, so that the percentage risk stays constant.
Applying these steps in the FxPro order window
On FxPro, the lot size box appears in the order entry screen alongside fields for price, stop-loss and take-profit. A practical workflow looks like this:
- Enter the desired lot size based on risk and stop-loss calculations.
- Check the displayed notional position value and required margin.
- Review the pip value that the platform shows for that lot size.
- Confirm that "stop-loss pips x pip value" matches the planned rand risk.
- Make sure the account still has room within the total risk limit before sending the order.
Saved or default lot sizes can speed up order entry for frequently traded pairs, but each new trade should still be checked against current account balance, volatility and stop-loss distance.
Frequently asked questions
How do I calculate the right lot size for my account balance?
What is the difference between a standard lot and a micro lot?
Should I use the maximum lot size my leverage allows?
Do I need to set stop-loss and take-profit every time I choose a lot size?
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