ASK RATE
The rate at which a financial instrument is offered for sale (as in
bid/ask spread).
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BAR CHART
A type of chart consisting of four significant points: the high
(1) and the low (2) prices, which form the vertical bar; the opening
(3) price, which is marked with a little horizontal line to the left
of the bar; and the closing (4) price, which is marked with a little
horizontal line to the right of the bar.
BEAR
A person who thinks that market prices will decline.
BEAR MARKET
A market that is characterized by declining prices.
BID RATE
An expression indicating the desire to buy at a certain price.
BROKER
An agent who handles investors orders to buy and sell financial
instruments against a commission.
BULL
A person who thinks that market prices will rise.
BULL MARKET
A market that is characterized by rising market prices.
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CABLE
A slang used among traders to indicate GBP/$ exchange rate.
CALL RATE
Overnight inter-bank interest rate.
CANDLESTICK CHART
A type of chart that consists of four major prices: high, low, open
and close. The body of the candlestick bar is formed by the opening
and closing prices. To indicate that the opening is higher than
closing, the body of the bar is left blank. If the instrument closes
below its opening, the body is filled.
CFD (Contract for Difference)
An agreement between two parties to exchange, at the close of the
contract, the difference between the opening price and the closing
price of the contract, multiplied by the number of (shares) specified
in the contract.
CLOSING PRICE
The last price of a contract at the end of a trading session.
COMMODITY
Any commodity approved and designated by the Board for trading in the
Exchange hall under the rules of the Exchange.
CONTRACT
An agreement to buy or sell a specified amount of a particular
commodity as specified by the Exchange. The contract specifications
detail the amount and grade of the product and the date on which the
contract will mature and become deliverable if it is not liquidated
earlier. Also, a term of reference describing a unit of trade for a
commodity futures. Unit of trading for a financial or commodity
future. Also, actual bilateral agreement between the parties (buyer
and seller) of a futures or options on futures transaction as defined
by an exchange.
CONTRACT MONTH
Typically identifies the month and year in which a futures contract
expires. Also called the delivery month.
CONVERTIBLE CURRENCY
A currency that can be freely exchanged for another or for gold
without special authorization from the appropriate authority.
COMMISSION
A transaction fee charged by a broker.
CONFIRMATION
A document exchanged by counterparts to a transaction that states the
terms of the transaction.
CONTRACT
The standard unit of trading.
CORRECTIONS
Counter-trend price movements that are largely the result of
profit-taking. These are technical moves that must occur, and their
correction distance can often be measured prior to occurrence by
Fibonacci correction ratios.
COUNTER-PARTY
A party or bank with whom a deal is made.
CREDIT CHECKING
Credit is an important consideration when making trades. As large sums
of money change hands it is important to check that the counter-party
is capable of making the trade. Once the price has been agreed then
the credit is checked. If the credit is not good then no trade takes
place.
CROSS-RATE
An exchange rate between two currencies. It is usually made up from
the individual exchange rates of the two currencies, measured against
the US$.
CURRENCY
Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as
legal tender as a basis for trade.
CYCLES
Variation where a point of observation returns to its origin. Certain
price movement patterns are believed and observed to have recurrence
according to Fibonacci sequential numbers, and thus can be predicted
accordingly. It is most often used to provide an estimate of timing of
a suspected turn of market movements, or a trend reversal.
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DAY TRADING
It is a term that refers to opening and closing the same
position/positions within one day's trading.
DEALER
An individual who acts as a principal or counterpart to a transaction.
Principals take one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread
(profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with
another party. In contrast, a broker is an individual or firm that
acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers for a fee
or commission.
DERIVATIVES
Derivatives are trades that are derived from some other existing
products, such as shares, bonds, currencies and commodities.
Derivatives can be traded through an exchange or out of Exchange (Over
The Counter or OTC). OTC derivatives carry more credit risk as they
are traded direct with the counter-party rather than through an
Exchange. Examples of derivative instruments include Options, Interest
Rate Swaps, Caps, and floors.
DIVERGENCE
When two or more indicators fail to pattern after price trends, they
are often observed to be an omen of major market corrections or trend
reversals. It shows up nearly without a fail on all formations of
double-tops/bottoms, much more so in case of triple-tops/bottoms.
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EURO
The currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU). A replacement for
the European Currency Unit (ECU).
EURODOLLARS
US dollars on deposit with a bank outside the United States, even if
this bank is a subsidiary of a U.S. bank. Consequently this deposit is
outside the jurisdiction of the United States.
EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK (ECB)
The Central Bank for the new European Monetary Union.
EXPIRATION DATE
The last day of trading for a futures contract.
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FEDERAL RESERVE (Fed)
The Central Bank for the United States.
FILL OR KILL
A client order that is a price limit order that must be filled
immediately or cancelled.
FLAT/SQUARE
To be flat or square is to be neither long nor short, or to have no
positions, or if all the positions held cancel each other out.
FLOATING INTEREST RATE
An interest rate that fluctuates as market rates move.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET (Fx/Forex)
The buying and selling of foreign currency. Most FX is quoted against
US$. If other currencies are traded (e.g. CHF) then it is known as a
cross rate.
FOREX (see Foreign Exchange Market)
An abbreviation of Foreign Exchange Market.
FORWARD
A deal that will commence at an agreed date in the future i.e. a 3
month GBP/$ will commence 3 months from the deal date.
FRONT AND BACK OFFICE
The `front office` usually means the trading room, while the `back
office` is where settlement of trades takes place.
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
A cause-and-effect study of market behaviour based on factors of news,
events, economy and politics.
FUTURES
Futures is a way of trading financial instruments, currencies or
commodities for forward value dates or delivery.
FUTURES CONTRACT
A futures contract is a legally binding standardized agreement made to
buy or sell a commodity or financial instrument sometime in the
future.
Fx (see Foreign Exchange Market)
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GTC (Good Till Cancelled)
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The
order remains standing until it is cancelled by the client.
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HEDGING
The practice of undertaking an investment activity in order to protect
against loss in another. An example of this is selling short to
nullify a previous purchase, or buying long to offset a previous short
sale.
HIGH/LOW
High/Low is the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for
an underlying instrument for a current trading day.
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INDICATED AND FIRM PRICES
An "indicated price " is one that is not a "firm price". An "indicated
price" is for information purposes and would need to be `firmed up` in
order to transact a deal.
INITIAL MARGIN
It is the deposit required before a client can transact any deal.
INSTRUMENT
Contract to be traded.
INTEREST RATE SWAPS (IRS)
It is a transaction whereby two counter-parties exchange fixed and
floating interest with each other. This transaction can be regarded as
two parallel loans, one fixed and one floating. The floating is set
against LIBOR, and the difference between the two rates is paid in the
appropriate direction on each rollover. In a single currency Interest
Rate Swaps, no principal changes hands, only Interest.
INTRODUCING BROKER (IB)
A person or organization that solicits or accepts orders to buy or
sell futures contracts or Forex but does not accept money or other
assets from the customers to support such orders.
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LEVERAGE
The ability to control large amounts of currency/commodity with a
comparatively small amount of capital.
LIBOR
LIBOR stands for London Inter-Bank Offer Rate. It is a reference point
used in IRS transactions for setting the floating side of derivative
deals. It is used as the reference point for most trades around the
globe.
LIMIT ORDER
It is an order given to sell at an agreed price sometime in the
future.
LIQUID/ILLIQUID MARKET
A Liquid Market is a situation when a "close" spread is obtained
between the bid and the offer price. It can also mean that the number
of institutions trading in the market is high. An Illiquid Market is
the opposite of a liquid market.
LIQUIDATION
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an
offsetting transaction.
LONG (Long Position/Going Long)
It is a market position where the client has bought a financial
instrument he previously did not hold/own . If a trader is "long $"
that means that he owns $. It is the opposite of "short".
LOT
The term used to describe a designated number of contracts, e.g., a
five lot purchase.
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MANAGED ACCOUNT/ DISCRETIONARY
ACCOUNT
An arrangement by which the holder of the account gives written power
of attorney to a person, often his broker, to make trading decisions.
MARGIN
Margin is the deposit withdrawn from the client account as collateral
to cover for losses if any, which may result from trades that the
client makes. It is returned to the client account when a trade is
closed.
MARGIN CALL
It is a demand for additional funds from the client to bring the
client`s margin deposits to a required minimum level to cover for a
possible adverse movement in price in the market.
MARK TO MARKET
It is a method that values the client`s books at the end of each
working day i.e. to debit or credit on a daily basis the clients
margin account based on the close of that day`s trading session. It
protects against the possibility of contract default.
MARKET MAKER
Market Maker is a "principal" that supplies prices to create a market
by supplying an offer and a bid price, thereby running a trading book.
MARKET RISK
Exposure to changes in market prices.
MINIMUM PRICE FLUCTUATION
The smallest increment of price movement possible in trading a given
contract, often referred to as a tick. The minimum unit by which the
price of a commodity can fluctuate.
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OFFSET
Taking a second futures position opposite to the initial or
opening position.
ONE CANCELS OTHER ORDER
Where the execution of one order automatically cancels a previous one.
OPEN POSITION
A deal that has not been settled by being reversed by an opposite
deal.
ORDER
An order is an instruction to make a trade.
OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKET (OTC)
A market where financial products such as foreign currencies, stocks
and other items are bought and sold outside an exchange market, by
telephone and other means of communication.
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PIP or POINTS
Depending on context, normally one basis point. i.e. 0.0001
POSITION
A position is a market commitment expressed by buying or selling.
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QUOTE
An indicative market price, normally used for information purposes
only.
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RATE
The price of one currency in terms of another, typically used for
dealing purposes.
RESISTANCE (Resistance Level)
A price level at which you expect selling to take place.
RISK
Exposure to uncertain change, most often used with a negative
connotation of adverse change.
ROLL OVER
It is a situation where a deal is rolled forward to another value date
based on the differential of the interest rates of two currencies
involved.
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SETTLEMENT
The process by which a trade is entered into the books and records of
the counterparts to a transaction. The settlement of currency trades
may or may not involve the actual physical exchange of one currency
for another.
SHORT
It is a market position where a client sells a currency that he does
not already own. If a trader is `short $` then he sold at a certain
price level expecting to buy later when the price level declines.
SPECULATOR
A market participant who tries to profit from buying and selling
futures contracts by anticipating future price movements.
SPOT
It usually refers to a cash market price for a financial
instrument/commodity.
SPREAD
The difference in prices between bid and offer rates.
STERLING
Slang for British Pound.
STOCK INDEX
An indicator used to measure and report value changes in a selected
group of stocks.
STOCK MARKET
A market in which shares of stock are brought and sold.
STOP ORDER / STOP LOSS ORDER
It is an order to sell or buy when the market reaches a particular
price.
SUPPORT or SUPPORT LEVEL
The bottoms representing the price level where selling decreases and
buying increases. Downward price movements are expected to slow down
when coming close to support levels. A strong support can turn the
market tide either into upside correction or upward trend reversal.
SWAPS
Swaps are used to exchange one currency for another and then back
again for a fixed period of time. The swap rate calculation indicates
the interest rate differential between two underlying currencies.
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TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
Analysis based on movements in a market through chart study, moving
averages, volume and other technical indicators.
TICK
The smallest allowable increment of price movement allowed for a
product during a trading session.
TREND
The general direction of a moving market, as shown by acceding to
descending peaks and bottoms of price movements.
TICKER
A ticker is a table and or a graph or both, showing a trade by trade
history of a said instrument. A ticker shows direction of a market
movement. There are tickers for day trading showing a day's movements
and historic tickers showing long term movements. Traders like to use
graphs as they show direction of market movement in an easy to
understand format.
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VOLUME
The number of contracts made during a specified period of time.
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YARD
Slang for a billion.
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