← Training● Basics · Lesson 2 of 7

How markets are priced

6 min read · Builds on Lesson 1
Lesson 2 of 7

In Lesson 1 we said trading is buying low and selling high. Now the obvious question: what is the price you are buying and selling at, and how is a “move” measured? Get comfortable with quotes, the spread, pips and lots — and a chart stops looking like noise.

Every price is actually two prices

Open any market and you will not see one price — you will see two, side by side. The bid (what you can sell at) and the ask (what you can buy at). The ask is always a touch higher than the bid.

Bid · you sell1.0850
Ask · you buy1.0852

So when you go long EUR/USD you pay the ask (1.0852); when you sell you get the bid (1.0850). You always buy a hair high and sell a hair low.

The spread is your cost

That little gap between bid and ask is the spread — and it is the cost of doing business. Here it is 0.0002, or 2 pips. The moment you enter a trade you are slightly down by the spread; price has to move in your favour by at least that much before you are break-even. Tighter spreads = cheaper trading, which is why liquid markets like EUR/USD are popular.

ExampleYou buy EUR/USD at the ask, 1.0852. If you closed instantly you would sell at the bid, 1.0850 — a 2-pip loss. That gap is the spread you paid to get in.

Pips: the unit of movement

A pip is the standard smallest move in a price. In most FX pairs it is the 4th decimal — 0.0001. So EUR/USD going 1.0850 → 1.0851 is one pip; 1.0850 → 1.0900 is fifty pips. It is just a clean way to talk about distance without saying “0.0001” all day. (Gold and indices measure moves in dollars or points instead, but the idea is the same: a unit of movement.)

Lots: how big your trade is

A lot is your position size. One standard lot of EUR/USD is 100,000 units — where one pip is worth about $10. There are smaller sizes too: a mini lot (10,000 units, ~$1/pip) and a micro lot (1,000 units, ~$0.10/pip). Same pip move, very different money — because pip value scales with size. Drag it and watch:

Live · 1 standard lot of EUR/USD ($10 per pip)
Move20 pips
$200profit (or loss) on the trade

That is the whole reason risk matters: size decides how much each pip is worth, so size decides how much a move can help — or hurt — you. We will turn that into a rule in Lesson 5.

The four arenas, quickly

FX trades in pairs and moves in pips. Indices (like the S&P 500) move in points. Gold is quoted in dollars per ounce. Crypto is quoted in dollars and swings far harder than the rest. Different units, same two-price, spread-and-size mechanics underneath.

Key takeaway

Every price is a bid and an ask; the gap between them (the spread) is your cost. A pip is one unit of movement, and a lot is your size — and size decides what each pip is worth in real money.

Quick check · 1 of 2

You go long EUR/USD. Which price do you actually get?

Right. You buy at the ask and sell at the bid — always a hair high to get in, a hair low to get out. That gap is the spread.Not quite. You buy at the ask (the higher price) and sell at the bid (the lower one). The difference is the spread you pay.
Quick check · 2 of 2

EUR/USD moves from 1.0850 to 1.0853. How far is that?

Exactly. Each pip is the 4th decimal (0.0001), so 1.0850 → 1.0853 is 3 pips.Not quite. A pip is the 4th decimal (0.0001). 1.0850 → 1.0853 is a move of 3 pips.
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Educational content only — nothing here is financial advice. Trading carries risk; never risk money you cannot afford to lose.