Abstract:Let’s keep it real for a minute. Most of you deposit hard-earned money—whether it is Naira, Shillings, or Rand—into a trading account, click "Buy," and immediately see a negative number in red.
You panic. You think the broker is stealing from you.
Well, sometimes they are, but usually, it is just the cost of doing business that nobody explained to you. If you want to survive the forex markets, you need to understand the mechanics under the hood. Stop guessing. Let’s break down the math so you can actually keep your profits.

Lets keep it real for a minute. Most of you deposit hard-earned money—whether it is Naira, Shillings, or Rand—into a trading account, click “Buy,” and immediately see a negative number in red.
You panic. You think the broker is stealing from you.
Well, sometimes they are, but usually, it is just the cost of doing business that nobody explained to you. If you want to survive the forex markets, you need to understand the mechanics under the hood. Stop guessing. Lets break down the math so you can actually keep your profits.
The Price Tag: Quotes and Pips
When you see EURUSD at 1.0850, that isn't just a random number. It is the price tag. It means 1 Euro costs 1.0850 US Dollars.
Now, look at the last digit. If the price moves from 1.0850 to 1.0851, that is a Pip.
For a newbie, a pip looks tiny. But in this game, pips are how we keep score. If you are trading a standard lot (more on that in a second), that tiny one-pip move is worth $10. If the market moves 50 pips against you, you just lost $500. That is rent money gone in an hour. Respect the pip.
The Silent Killer: Understanding the Spread
Here is why you start your trade in the red.
Every currency pair has two prices:
- Bid (Buy price)
- Ask (Sell price)
The difference between them is the Spread. Think of it like the Bureau de Change operator or the unexpected fees at the bank. If you buy dollars from the guy on the street, he sells to you at a high rate. If you try to sell those same dollars back to him five seconds later, he buys them back at a lower rate. He keeps the difference.
In forex, your broker is that guy.
If the spread is 2 pips, the market has to move 2 pips in your favor just for you to break even. If you are scalping (taking quick trades), high spreads will eat you alive.
Coach K‘s Audit: This is where you need to be careful. Some brokers widen their spreads when major news hits to trigger your stop loss. Don't be a victim. Before you commit your capital, check the broker’s regulatory status and spread history on WikiFX. If the app shows they have a history of complaint regarding slippage or manipulation, take your money elsewhere.
Size Matters: Lots and Leverage
This is where 90% of beginners blow their accounts. They get greedy.
- Standard Lot (1.00): You are controlling 100,000 units of currency.
- Mini Lot (0.10): You control 10,000 units.
- Micro Lot (0.01): You control 1,000 units.
“But Coach, I only have $100 in my account. How can I control 100,000 units?”
Enter Leverage.
Leverage is a loan from your broker. If you have 1:100 leverage, your $100 acts like $10,000. It sounds amazing, right? You can make massive gains with small money.
But here is the trap: Leverage works both ways. If you are highly leveraged, a small move against you will trigger a “Margin Call.” This is when the broker forcibly closes your trades because you don't have enough cash (Margin) left to cover the potential losses.
Treat leverage like fire. It can cook your food, or it can burn your house down. If you are new, stick to 0.01 lots until you prove you can be profitable.
Is High Leverage a Scam?
It's not a scam, but it is dangerous.
High leverage usually tempts people who want to get rich quick. If you have a $500 account and you open a Standard Lot (1.00), a 50-pip move wipes you out completely.
Calculated risk is the name of the game. Always calculate your risk per trade. If you are risking more than 2% of your account on a single trade, you aren't trading—you are gambling.
Mastering Your Entry: Order Types
Stop entering trades blindly. You have tools to control how you enter the market.
1. Market Order
This is the “I want it NOW” button. You buy or sell at the current available price. You use this when the market is moving fast and you just need to get in. The downside? You might get a worse price than you expected (slippage).
2. Limit Order
This is for the patient trader. You tell the market, “I will only buy if the price drops to 1.0800.” You set it and wait. Its like waiting for a discount sale. This is smart because you get a better price and a tighter stop loss.
3. Stop Order
This is usually used for breakouts. You say, “If the price breaks above this resistance level, buy me in.” You are betting the momentum will continue.
The Most Important Order: Stop Loss
If you take nothing else from this reading, take this: Never trade without a Stop Loss.
A Stop Loss is your insurance policy. It tells the broker, “If the price hits this level, get me out immediately.” It prevents a bad day from becoming a bankrupt life.
We see it all the time on the WikiFX forums—traders crying because they refused to use a stop loss, hoping the market would turn around. Then a news event hits, the market spikes, and their balance hits zero. Don't let your ego drain your wallet.
The Bottom Line
Trading isn't just about reading charts; it's about understanding the costs.
- Watch the Spread (cost to open).
- Respect Leverage (don't over-borrow).
- Use Limit Orders to get better prices.
- Always use a Stop Loss.
Refine your strategy, keep your lot sizes small, and treat this like a business, not a casino.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading involves high risk and you can lose your entire capital. Always do your own research.