Not long ago, someone asked me what PNL means in finance, and I realized that many novice traders still don’t fully understand this concept. So here’s my explanation without too much technicality.



PNL is simply Profit and Loss, or gains and losses. It’s the result of a trade: how much you gained or lost. Period. Nothing more complicated than that.

Think of it this way: you bought Bitcoin at $40,000 and sold it at $42,000. Your gross profit was $2,000. But here’s the important part: you have to subtract the exchange fees. So your real PNL ended up at about $1,800. That’s what you actually kept in your pocket.

The formula is ridiculously simple: selling price minus buying price, multiplied by the amount you bought, minus fees. If the number is positive, you made money. If it’s negative, you lost money. That’s how PNL works in finance.

Now, there are two types that it’s important to differentiate. There’s **PNL no realizado**, which are the gains or losses you have on an open position ( that you haven’t sold yet ). And there’s **PNL realizado**, which is what you actually gained or lost once you closed the trade.

For example: you bought 0.1 BTC at $40,000 ( investing $4,000 ). If the price rises to $45,000, technically you have $500 unrealized profit . But if you don’t sell, that only exists on paper. Once you sell at $45,000 and receive $4,500, that’s when it becomes PNL realizado.

Many beginner traders get obsessed with watching their PNL no realizado rise throughout the day, but they forget that it can change drastically if the price drops. It’s like having money in the air until you actually cash it out.

There are other related indicators you should also know. ROI, which is the percentage return on your investment. **apalancamiento**, which amplifies both your gains and your losses. And **margen**, which is the collateral you need to keep an open position.

But essentially, when someone tells you, “my PNL is in the red,” it means they’re losing money. If they say, “I’m in the green,” it means they’re making money. It’s the financial thermometer of any trader.

What many don’t understand is that PNL isn’t just a number. It reflects your trading decisions. It can be positive because you did a good analysis, or negative because you panicked or didn’t follow your plan. That’s why it’s so important to understand what PNL means in finance: it’s not just math—it’s feedback on your strategy.

So the next time you see your PNL change on the screen, remember that it’s simply the difference between what you paid and what it’s worth now, nothing more. And if you want to see it grow, you need to make good decisions in your trades.
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