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Glossary (50+)·South Africa·FSCA

FxPro spreads for South Africa real trade examples

See how FxPro spread costs affect South African forex trades, with rand-based examples for mini and standard lots on major FX and ZAR pairs.

How FxPro spreads affect typical South African trades

For a South African trader, the spread is the first built-in cost each time a position opens on the FxPro platform. With a starting capital of about R5,000 and a 1% risk rule, a common setup on EUR/USD is a 0.2 mini lot position (20,000 units). On this size, each pip is worth about $2, so a 1-pip spread translates to roughly $2, or about R36 at current exchange rates. The price needs to move at least this amount in the trader's favor before the position reaches breakeven.

Lot size changes the rand value of every pip and, as a result, the actual spread cost. A mini lot (10,000 units) carries a pip value of $1, while a standard lot (100,000 units) has a pip value of $10. If a trader opens 1 standard lot on EUR/USD with a spread of 0.8 pips, the immediate cost is $8, which is around R144. When several positions of this size are opened and closed during the day, these costs stack up quickly. Ten round-trip trades on this basis would generate about R1,440 in spread costs alone, a figure that can represent a noticeable share of a smaller account.

Position size and rand value of the spread

Spreads on FxPro are quoted in pips, but the impact on a South African account is fully determined by position size:

01

Micro lot (1,000 units): about $0.10 per pip

02

Mini lot (10,000 units): about $1 per pip

03

Standard lot (100,000 units): about $10 per pip

For USD/ZAR or EUR/ZAR pairs, spreads are often expressed in rand per unit. A typical spread of 0.05 ZAR with a standard lot (100,000 units) results in a spread cost of roughly R5,000. On liquid global majors such as EUR/USD or USD/JPY, spreads are usually tighter, often between 0.6 and 1.1 pips in active trading hours, so the absolute cost on an equivalent lot size is lower in rand terms.

South African traders frequently begin with accounts of about R1,500 to R5,000, which makes precise position sizing important. A standard risk formula is often used: risk amount divided by (stop-loss pips × pip value). For example, with R2,000 capital and 1% risk (R20) on a 50-pip stop-loss, the calculation yields a lot size of around 0.04 mini lots to keep risk within R20. If the spread on this position is approximately 1 pip, the cost is about R1.44, which is a small fraction of the risk amount.

Comparing spread costs for different account sizes

The effect of spread on a South African account becomes clearer when comparing several typical trading profiles on FxPro:

Trader profile Capital (ZAR) Position size Pair / spread Approx. spread cost Cost share of equity
Conservative R10,000 0.1 standard lot (10,000 units) GBP/USD, 1.2 pips $1.20 ≈ R21.60 About 0.22%
Intermediate R25,000 0.5 standard lots GBP/USD, 1.2 pips $6 ≈ R108 About 0.43%
Active R50,000 2 standard lots GBP/USD, 1.2 pips $24 ≈ R432 About 0.86%

The absolute rand amount of the spread increases in line with position size, but the percentage of total capital can remain relatively modest if the account is adequately funded. However, frequency of trading changes the picture. An intermediate trader who keeps position sizes constant and executes around 20 trades in a month would see spread costs of roughly R2,160, which corresponds to about 8.6% of a R25,000 starting balance if results are otherwise breakeven.

Spread differences between major and ZAR pairs

Spreads on FxPro differ between highly liquid global majors and pairs that involve ZAR. A standard lot on USD/ZAR with a spread of about 0.05 ZAR per unit leads to an estimated spread cost near R5,000, since the calculation uses 100,000 units × R0.05. The same standard lot size on EUR/USD with a spread of 0.8 pips leads to a cost near $8, or roughly R144. The contrast illustrates how spreads on ZAR pairs can be substantially larger in rand terms due to local liquidity and pricing characteristics.

More exotic currency pairs and less liquid instruments are usually quoted with wider spreads to reflect market conditions. For South African traders using FxPro to access commodity CFDs or other contracts, spreads are quoted in the instrument's own units and not in pips, but the underlying logic is similar: contract value multiplied by the spread in points gives the approximate entry cost. On such instruments, calculating the expected spread in rand before entering becomes particularly relevant when using short-term strategies with relatively tight profit targets.

Using spreads in practical risk and strategy planning

For trade planning on FxPro, South African users typically treat spread as part of the risk and reward structure. A scalping setup on EUR/USD aiming for 5 pips of profit has to compensate for a spread of about 1 pip, so the market must move around 6 pips in the right direction before the position can reach the desired profit. For swing or position trades that seek larger moves over several days, this one-time cost becomes relatively small compared with potential swings of hundreds of pips.

Time of day also influences spreads. During the overlap of London and New York sessions, roughly between 14:00 and 18:00 South African time, liquidity on major pairs is usually highest and spreads tend to narrow. Outside of these hours, temporary spread widening is more common, which raises the entry cost. On a standard lot, a change from 0.8 pips to 2 pips on EUR/USD means an additional spread cost of roughly $12, or about R21.60 extra per side compared to the tighter level.

Account size can blunt or amplify the impact of spread costs. Very small balances, for instance near R150 in a micro account, are more sensitive to normal spread fluctuations and intraday volatility. Balances from about R5,000 to R20,000 offer more capacity to absorb spread costs so that these remain a smaller part of the overall equity, which helps strategies perform closer to their theoretical expectations.

Spread is often the primary component of trading cost for FxPro accounts that do not charge separate commissions. For a South African trader placing 50 round-trip trades per month at 0.2 mini lots on a pair with an average spread of 1 pip, an approximate monthly cost can be calculated as:

  • 50 trades × 1 pip × $2 per pip = $100
  • $100 is around R1,800 at current exchange levels

For a R5,000 account, this equals roughly 36% of the starting capital, while the same activity level on a R20,000 account results in a cost of about 9% of equity. Such comparisons show why aligning trading frequency, position size and initial funding is important when trading through FxPro.

The core formula for estimating the spread cost in advance is simple: spread in pips multiplied by lot size and pip value gives the total cost, which can then be converted to rand. For indices, commodities and cryptocurrencies on FxPro, the formula remains similar even though the spread is quoted in points or units instead of pips. Maintaining a record of accumulated spreads over time helps South African traders see how much of their performance comes from market movements and how much is absorbed by transaction costs.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a 1-pip spread cost on a mini lot trade in rands?

On a mini lot (10,000 units), each pip is worth about $1. With a 1-pip spread, the cost is approximately $1, which translates to roughly R18–R20 depending on the current USD/ZAR exchange rate. This is the immediate cost you pay when opening the position, before any market movement.

What spread should I expect on USD/ZAR with a typical South African forex account?

USD/ZAR spreads are typically quoted in ZAR terms rather than pips, with common values around 0.05 ZAR per unit for liquid conditions. The actual spread widens during low-liquidity periods or market volatility. Major pairs like EUR/USD generally offer tighter spreads of 0.6–1.1 pips, while exotic ZAR pairs tend to be wider due to lower trading volume.

How do I calculate the total spread cost for my trade size?

Multiply the spread in pips by your position size, then by the pip value for that lot size. For example, a 0.8-pip spread on 1 standard lot (100,000 units) costs 0.8 × $10 = $8, or about R144. The formula is: spread (pips) × trade size (lots) × pip value = total cost in your account currency.