GLOSSARY
Knowing the terminology of trading and financial markets is crucial for informed investment activity. Those who approach online trading do not always have the appropriate terminological knowledge; for this reason the support of a glossary is essential to understand some concepts that are otherwise difficult to understand.
Approaching the financial world, it can happen to run into terms with an unclear meaning. Online trading, like any financial activity, requires continuous training and a solid command of terminology. Only through knowledge of the most important financial mechanisms is it possible to obtain satisfactory results. This is the reason for the FXORO glossary.
THE FXORO GLOSSARY
A complete glossary, like that of FXORO, allows the user to learn the main technical terms related to trading and to face with more serenity their own activity on the stock markets.
Our glossary includes nearly 100 terms, broken down by initial letter. Inside, an investor can find all the terms, anglicisms, technical definitions most used in the trading world and understand their actual meaning.
Additional support for an increasingly updated and informed trading activity!
A
•
Account
Record of all transactions.
•
Account Balance
Amount of money in an account.
•
Appreciation
A currency is said to appreciate when price rises in response to market demand; an increase in the value of an
asset.
•
Arbitrage
Taking advantage of countervailing prices in different markets by the purchase or sale of an instrument and
simultaneous taking of an equal and opposite position in a related market to profit from small price
differentials.
•
Ask, Offer
The price, or rate, that a willing seller is prepared to sell at.
•
Ausie
The Australian Dollar.
B
•
Back Office
The departments and processes related to the settlement of financial transactions (i.e. written confirmation and
settlement of trades, record keeping).
•
Balance of Payments
A record of transactions with the rest of the world over a particular time period. These include merchandise,
services and capital flows.
•
Balance of Trade
The value of a country's exports minus its imports.
•
Bar Chart
A type of chart which consists of four significant points: the high and the low prices, which form the vertical
bar, the opening price, which is marked with a little horizontal line to the left of the bar, and the closing
price, which is marked with a little horizontal line of the right of the bar.
•
Base Currency
The currency in which an investor or issuer maintains its book of accounts; the currency that other currencies
are quoted against. In the forex market, the US Dollar is normally considered the `base` currency for quotes,
meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair.
•
Basis Point
One hundredth of a percent.
•
Bear
An investor who believes that prices/the market will decline.
•
Bear Market
A market distinguished by a prolonged period of declining prices accompanied with widespread pessimism.
•
BID
The price that a buyer is prepared to purchase at; the price offered for a currency.
•
Bonds
Bonds are tradable instruments (debt securities) which are issued by a borrower to raise capital. They pay
either fixed or floating interest, known as the coupon. As interest rates fall, bond prices rise and vice versa.
•
Broker
An individual, or firm, that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers usually for a fee or
commission. In contrast, a `dealer` commits capital and takes one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread
(profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party.
•
Buba
Bundesbank, Central Bank of Germany.
•
Bull
An investor who believes that prices/the market will rise.
•
Bull Market
A market distinguished by a prolonged period of rising prices. (Opposite of bear market)
C
•
Candlestick Chart
A chart that indicates the trading range for the day as well as the opening and closing price. If the open price
is higher than the close price, the rectangle between the open and close price is shaded. If the close price is
higher than the open price, that area of the chart is not shaded.
•
Central Bank
A government or quasi-governmental organization that manages a country`s monetary policy a prints a nation's
currency. For example, the US central bank is the Federal Reserve, others include the ECB, BOE, BOJ.
•
Chartist
An individual who uses charts and graphs and interprets historical data to find trends and predict future
movements. Also referred to as Technical Trader.
•
Clearing
The process of settling a trade.
•
Closed Position
Exposures in Foreign Currencies that no longer exist. The process to close a position is to sell or buy a
certain amount of currency to offset an equal amount of the open position. This will 'square' the position.
•
Commission
A transaction fee charged by a broker.
•
Confirmation
A document exchanged by counterparts to a transaction that confirms the terms of said transaction.
•
Contract
The standard unit of trading.
•
Counter Party
The participant, either a bank or customer, with whom the financial transaction is made.
•
Cross Rate
An exchange rate between two currencies. The cross rate is said to be non-standard in the country where the
currency pair is quoted. For example, in the US, a GBP/CHF quote would be considered a cross rate, whereas in
the UK or Switzerland it would be one of the primary currency pairs traded.
•
Currency
Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as legal tender and a basis for trade.
•
Currency Pair
The two currencies that make up a foreign exchange rate. For Example, EUR/USD
•
Currency Risk
The risk of incurring losses resulting from an adverse change in exchange rates.
D
•
Day Trading
Opening and closing the same position or positions within the same trading session.
•
Dealer
An individual or firm that 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.
•
Deficit
A negative balance of trade or payments.
•
Delivery
An actual delivery where both sides transfer possession of the currencies traded.
•
Deposit
The borrowing and lending of cash. The rate that money is borrowed/lent at is known as the deposit rate (or depo
rate). Certificates of Deposit (CD`S) are also tradable instruments.
•
Depreciation
A decline in the value of a currency due to market forces.
•
Derivative
A contract that changes in value in relation to the price movements of a related or underlying security, future
or other physical instrument. An Option is the most common derivative instrument.
•
Devaluation
The deliberate downward adjustment of a currency's price, normally by official announcement.
E
•
ECB - European Central Bank
The Central Bank for the European Monetary Union.
•
End Of Day (Mark-to-Market)
Traders account for their positions in two ways: accrual or mark-to-market. An accrual system accounts only for
cash flows when they occur, hence, it only shows a profit or loss when realized. The mark-to-market method
values the trader`s book at the end of each working day using the closing market rates or revaluation rates. Any
profit or loss is booked and the trader will start the next day with a net position.
•
Euro
The currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU) which replaced the European Currency Unit (ECU).
•
Execution Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
F
•
Fed - Federal Reserve
The Central Bank for the United States.
•
Fixed Exchange Rate (Representative Rate)
An official exchange rate set by monetary authorities for one or more currencies. In practice, even fixed
exchange rates fluctuate between definite upper and lower bands, leading to intervention.
•
Flat (Square, Balanced)
To be neither long nor short is the same as to be flat or square. One would have a flat book if he has no
positions or if all the positions cancel each other out.
•
FOMC - Federal Open Market Committee
The Federal Reserve monetary committee.
•
Forex - Foreign Exchange
The simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another in an over-the-counter market. Most major FX is
quoted against the US Dollar.
•
Forward
The pre-specified exchange rate for a foreign exchange contract settling at some agreed future date, based upon
the interest rate differential between the two currencies involved.
•
Forward Points
The pips added to or subtracted from the current exchange rate to calculate a forward price.
•
FRA - Forward Rate Agreements
FRA`s are transactions that allow one to borrow/lend at a stated interest rate over a specific time period in
the future.
•
Front and Back Office
The front office usually comprises of the trading room and other main business activities.
•
Fundamental Analysis
Analysis of economic and political information with the objective of determining future movements in a financial
market.
•
Futures Contract
An obligation to exchange a good or instrument at a set price on a future date. The primary difference between a
Future and a Forward is that Futures are typically traded over an exchange (Exchange- Traded Contacts - ETC),
versus forwards, which are considered Over The Counter (OTC) contracts. An OTC is any contract NOT traded on an
exchange.
G
•
G5
The five leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK.
•
G7
The seven leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
•
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
Total value of a country's output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
•
GNP - Gross National Product
GNP - Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.
•
GTC - Good-Till-Cancelled
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The GTC will remain in place until executed or
cancelled.
H
•
Hedge
A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
•
High/Low
Usually the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for the underlying instrument for the current
trading day.
I
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
K
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
Account
Record of all transactions.
•
Account Balance
Amount of money in an account.
•
Appreciation
A currency is said to appreciate when price rises in response to market demand; an increase in the value of an
asset.
•
Arbitrage
Taking advantage of countervailing prices in different markets by the purchase or sale of an instrument and
simultaneous taking of an equal and opposite position in a related market to profit from small price
differentials.
•
Ask, Offer
The price, or rate, that a willing seller is prepared to sell at.
•
Ausie
The Australian Dollar.
•
Back Office
The departments and processes related to the settlement of financial transactions (i.e. written confirmation and
settlement of trades, record keeping).
•
Balance of Payments
A record of transactions with the rest of the world over a particular time period. These include merchandise,
services and capital flows.
•
Balance of Trade
The value of a country's exports minus its imports.
•
Bar Chart
A type of chart which consists of four significant points: the high and the low prices, which form the vertical
bar, the opening price, which is marked with a little horizontal line to the left of the bar, and the closing
price, which is marked with a little horizontal line of the right of the bar.
•
Base Currency
The currency in which an investor or issuer maintains its book of accounts; the currency that other currencies
are quoted against. In the forex market, the US Dollar is normally considered the `base` currency for quotes,
meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair.
•
Basis Point
One hundredth of a percent.
•
Bear
An investor who believes that prices/the market will decline.
•
Bear Market
A market distinguished by a prolonged period of declining prices accompanied with widespread pessimism.
•
BID
The price that a buyer is prepared to purchase at; the price offered for a currency.
•
Bonds
Bonds are tradable instruments (debt securities) which are issued by a borrower to raise capital. They pay
either fixed or floating interest, known as the coupon. As interest rates fall, bond prices rise and vice versa.
•
Broker
An individual, or firm, that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers usually for a fee or
commission. In contrast, a `dealer` commits capital and takes one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread
(profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party.
•
Buba
Bundesbank, Central Bank of Germany.
•
Bull
An investor who believes that prices/the market will rise.
•
Bull Market
A market distinguished by a prolonged period of rising prices. (Opposite of bear market)
C
•
Candlestick Chart
A chart that indicates the trading range for the day as well as the opening and closing price. If the open price
is higher than the close price, the rectangle between the open and close price is shaded. If the close price is
higher than the open price, that area of the chart is not shaded.
•
Central Bank
A government or quasi-governmental organization that manages a country`s monetary policy a prints a nation's
currency. For example, the US central bank is the Federal Reserve, others include the ECB, BOE, BOJ.
•
Chartist
An individual who uses charts and graphs and interprets historical data to find trends and predict future
movements. Also referred to as Technical Trader.
•
Clearing
The process of settling a trade.
•
Closed Position
Exposures in Foreign Currencies that no longer exist. The process to close a position is to sell or buy a
certain amount of currency to offset an equal amount of the open position. This will 'square' the position.
•
Commission
A transaction fee charged by a broker.
•
Confirmation
A document exchanged by counterparts to a transaction that confirms the terms of said transaction.
•
Contract
The standard unit of trading.
•
Counter Party
The participant, either a bank or customer, with whom the financial transaction is made.
•
Cross Rate
An exchange rate between two currencies. The cross rate is said to be non-standard in the country where the
currency pair is quoted. For example, in the US, a GBP/CHF quote would be considered a cross rate, whereas in
the UK or Switzerland it would be one of the primary currency pairs traded.
•
Currency
Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as legal tender and a basis for trade.
•
Currency Pair
The two currencies that make up a foreign exchange rate. For Example, EUR/USD
•
Currency Risk
The risk of incurring losses resulting from an adverse change in exchange rates.
D
•
Day Trading
Opening and closing the same position or positions within the same trading session.
•
Dealer
An individual or firm that 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.
•
Deficit
A negative balance of trade or payments.
•
Delivery
An actual delivery where both sides transfer possession of the currencies traded.
•
Deposit
The borrowing and lending of cash. The rate that money is borrowed/lent at is known as the deposit rate (or depo
rate). Certificates of Deposit (CD`S) are also tradable instruments.
•
Depreciation
A decline in the value of a currency due to market forces.
•
Derivative
A contract that changes in value in relation to the price movements of a related or underlying security, future
or other physical instrument. An Option is the most common derivative instrument.
•
Devaluation
The deliberate downward adjustment of a currency's price, normally by official announcement.
E
•
ECB - European Central Bank
The Central Bank for the European Monetary Union.
•
End Of Day (Mark-to-Market)
Traders account for their positions in two ways: accrual or mark-to-market. An accrual system accounts only for
cash flows when they occur, hence, it only shows a profit or loss when realized. The mark-to-market method
values the trader`s book at the end of each working day using the closing market rates or revaluation rates. Any
profit or loss is booked and the trader will start the next day with a net position.
•
Euro
The currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU) which replaced the European Currency Unit (ECU).
•
Execution Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
F
•
Fed - Federal Reserve
The Central Bank for the United States.
•
Fixed Exchange Rate (Representative Rate)
An official exchange rate set by monetary authorities for one or more currencies. In practice, even fixed
exchange rates fluctuate between definite upper and lower bands, leading to intervention.
•
Flat (Square, Balanced)
To be neither long nor short is the same as to be flat or square. One would have a flat book if he has no
positions or if all the positions cancel each other out.
•
FOMC - Federal Open Market Committee
The Federal Reserve monetary committee.
•
Forex - Foreign Exchange
The simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another in an over-the-counter market. Most major FX is
quoted against the US Dollar.
•
Forward
The pre-specified exchange rate for a foreign exchange contract settling at some agreed future date, based upon
the interest rate differential between the two currencies involved.
•
Forward Points
The pips added to or subtracted from the current exchange rate to calculate a forward price.
•
FRA - Forward Rate Agreements
FRA`s are transactions that allow one to borrow/lend at a stated interest rate over a specific time period in
the future.
•
Front and Back Office
The front office usually comprises of the trading room and other main business activities.
•
Fundamental Analysis
Analysis of economic and political information with the objective of determining future movements in a financial
market.
•
Futures Contract
An obligation to exchange a good or instrument at a set price on a future date. The primary difference between a
Future and a Forward is that Futures are typically traded over an exchange (Exchange- Traded Contacts - ETC),
versus forwards, which are considered Over The Counter (OTC) contracts. An OTC is any contract NOT traded on an
exchange.
G
•
G5
The five leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK.
•
G7
The seven leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
•
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
Total value of a country's output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
•
GNP - Gross National Product
GNP - Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.
•
GTC - Good-Till-Cancelled
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The GTC will remain in place until executed or
cancelled.
H
•
Hedge
A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
•
High/Low
Usually the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for the underlying instrument for the current
trading day.
I
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
K
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
Candlestick Chart
A chart that indicates the trading range for the day as well as the opening and closing price. If the open price
is higher than the close price, the rectangle between the open and close price is shaded. If the close price is
higher than the open price, that area of the chart is not shaded.
•
Central Bank
A government or quasi-governmental organization that manages a country`s monetary policy a prints a nation's
currency. For example, the US central bank is the Federal Reserve, others include the ECB, BOE, BOJ.
•
Chartist
An individual who uses charts and graphs and interprets historical data to find trends and predict future
movements. Also referred to as Technical Trader.
•
Clearing
The process of settling a trade.
•
Closed Position
Exposures in Foreign Currencies that no longer exist. The process to close a position is to sell or buy a
certain amount of currency to offset an equal amount of the open position. This will 'square' the position.
•
Commission
A transaction fee charged by a broker.
•
Confirmation
A document exchanged by counterparts to a transaction that confirms the terms of said transaction.
•
Contract
The standard unit of trading.
•
Counter Party
The participant, either a bank or customer, with whom the financial transaction is made.
•
Cross Rate
An exchange rate between two currencies. The cross rate is said to be non-standard in the country where the
currency pair is quoted. For example, in the US, a GBP/CHF quote would be considered a cross rate, whereas in
the UK or Switzerland it would be one of the primary currency pairs traded.
•
Currency
Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as legal tender and a basis for trade.
•
Currency Pair
The two currencies that make up a foreign exchange rate. For Example, EUR/USD
•
Currency Risk
The risk of incurring losses resulting from an adverse change in exchange rates.
•
Day Trading
Opening and closing the same position or positions within the same trading session.
•
Dealer
An individual or firm that 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.
•
Deficit
A negative balance of trade or payments.
•
Delivery
An actual delivery where both sides transfer possession of the currencies traded.
•
Deposit
The borrowing and lending of cash. The rate that money is borrowed/lent at is known as the deposit rate (or depo
rate). Certificates of Deposit (CD`S) are also tradable instruments.
•
Depreciation
A decline in the value of a currency due to market forces.
•
Derivative
A contract that changes in value in relation to the price movements of a related or underlying security, future
or other physical instrument. An Option is the most common derivative instrument.
•
Devaluation
The deliberate downward adjustment of a currency's price, normally by official announcement.
E
•
ECB - European Central Bank
The Central Bank for the European Monetary Union.
•
End Of Day (Mark-to-Market)
Traders account for their positions in two ways: accrual or mark-to-market. An accrual system accounts only for
cash flows when they occur, hence, it only shows a profit or loss when realized. The mark-to-market method
values the trader`s book at the end of each working day using the closing market rates or revaluation rates. Any
profit or loss is booked and the trader will start the next day with a net position.
•
Euro
The currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU) which replaced the European Currency Unit (ECU).
•
Execution Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
F
•
Fed - Federal Reserve
The Central Bank for the United States.
•
Fixed Exchange Rate (Representative Rate)
An official exchange rate set by monetary authorities for one or more currencies. In practice, even fixed
exchange rates fluctuate between definite upper and lower bands, leading to intervention.
•
Flat (Square, Balanced)
To be neither long nor short is the same as to be flat or square. One would have a flat book if he has no
positions or if all the positions cancel each other out.
•
FOMC - Federal Open Market Committee
The Federal Reserve monetary committee.
•
Forex - Foreign Exchange
The simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another in an over-the-counter market. Most major FX is
quoted against the US Dollar.
•
Forward
The pre-specified exchange rate for a foreign exchange contract settling at some agreed future date, based upon
the interest rate differential between the two currencies involved.
•
Forward Points
The pips added to or subtracted from the current exchange rate to calculate a forward price.
•
FRA - Forward Rate Agreements
FRA`s are transactions that allow one to borrow/lend at a stated interest rate over a specific time period in
the future.
•
Front and Back Office
The front office usually comprises of the trading room and other main business activities.
•
Fundamental Analysis
Analysis of economic and political information with the objective of determining future movements in a financial
market.
•
Futures Contract
An obligation to exchange a good or instrument at a set price on a future date. The primary difference between a
Future and a Forward is that Futures are typically traded over an exchange (Exchange- Traded Contacts - ETC),
versus forwards, which are considered Over The Counter (OTC) contracts. An OTC is any contract NOT traded on an
exchange.
G
•
G5
The five leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK.
•
G7
The seven leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
•
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
Total value of a country's output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
•
GNP - Gross National Product
GNP - Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.
•
GTC - Good-Till-Cancelled
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The GTC will remain in place until executed or
cancelled.
H
•
Hedge
A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
•
High/Low
Usually the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for the underlying instrument for the current
trading day.
I
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
K
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
ECB - European Central Bank
The Central Bank for the European Monetary Union.
•
End Of Day (Mark-to-Market)
Traders account for their positions in two ways: accrual or mark-to-market. An accrual system accounts only for
cash flows when they occur, hence, it only shows a profit or loss when realized. The mark-to-market method
values the trader`s book at the end of each working day using the closing market rates or revaluation rates. Any
profit or loss is booked and the trader will start the next day with a net position.
•
Euro
The currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU) which replaced the European Currency Unit (ECU).
•
Execution Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
•
Fed - Federal Reserve
The Central Bank for the United States.
•
Fixed Exchange Rate (Representative Rate)
An official exchange rate set by monetary authorities for one or more currencies. In practice, even fixed
exchange rates fluctuate between definite upper and lower bands, leading to intervention.
•
Flat (Square, Balanced)
To be neither long nor short is the same as to be flat or square. One would have a flat book if he has no
positions or if all the positions cancel each other out.
•
FOMC - Federal Open Market Committee
The Federal Reserve monetary committee.
•
Forex - Foreign Exchange
The simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another in an over-the-counter market. Most major FX is
quoted against the US Dollar.
•
Forward
The pre-specified exchange rate for a foreign exchange contract settling at some agreed future date, based upon
the interest rate differential between the two currencies involved.
•
Forward Points
The pips added to or subtracted from the current exchange rate to calculate a forward price.
•
FRA - Forward Rate Agreements
FRA`s are transactions that allow one to borrow/lend at a stated interest rate over a specific time period in
the future.
•
Front and Back Office
The front office usually comprises of the trading room and other main business activities.
•
Fundamental Analysis
Analysis of economic and political information with the objective of determining future movements in a financial
market.
•
Futures Contract
An obligation to exchange a good or instrument at a set price on a future date. The primary difference between a
Future and a Forward is that Futures are typically traded over an exchange (Exchange- Traded Contacts - ETC),
versus forwards, which are considered Over The Counter (OTC) contracts. An OTC is any contract NOT traded on an
exchange.
G
•
G5
The five leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK.
•
G7
The seven leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
•
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
Total value of a country's output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
•
GNP - Gross National Product
GNP - Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.
•
GTC - Good-Till-Cancelled
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The GTC will remain in place until executed or
cancelled.
H
•
Hedge
A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
•
High/Low
Usually the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for the underlying instrument for the current
trading day.
I
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
K
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
G5
The five leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK.
•
G7
The seven leading industrial countries, being US, Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
•
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
Total value of a country's output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
•
GNP - Gross National Product
GNP - Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.
•
GTC - Good-Till-Cancelled
An order left with a Dealer to buy or sell at a fixed price. The GTC will remain in place until executed or
cancelled.
•
Hedge
A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
•
High/Low
Usually the highest traded price and the lowest traded price for the underlying instrument for the current
trading day.
I
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
K
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
Inflation
An economic condition where there is an increase in the price of consumer goods, thereby eroding purchasing
power.
•
Initial Margin
The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.
•
Interbank Rates
The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.
•
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention
refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
•
IRS - Interest Rate Swaps
An exchange of two debt obligations that have different payment streams. The transaction usually exchanges two
parallel loans; one fixed the other floating.
•
Kiwi
The New-Zealand Dollar.
L
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
M
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
Leading Indicators
Economic variables that are considered to predict future economic activity (i.e. Unemployment, Consumer Price
Index, Producer Price Index, Retail Sales, Personal Income, Prime Rate, Discount Rate, and Federal Funds Rate).
•
Leverage
Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
•
Libor - London InterBank Offered Rate
The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Large international banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
•
Liquidation
The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.
•
Liquidity
The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.
•
Long
A position to purchase more of an instrument than is sold, hence, an appreciation in value if market prices
increase.
•
Long Position
A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought,
the position is said to be long.
•
Loonie
The Canadian Dollar.
•
Lot
A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer number
•
Margin
The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
•
Market Maker
A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial
instrument.
•
Market Order
An order to buy/sell at the best price available when the order reaches the market.
O
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
P
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
OCO - One Cancels the Other
A contingent order where the execution of one part of the order automatically cancels the other part.
•
Open order
An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good 'til
Cancelled Orders.
•
Open Position
An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.
•
Options
An agreement that allows the holder to have the option to buy/sell a specific security at a certain price within
a certain time. Two types of options – call and put. A call is the right to buy while a put is the right to
sell. One can write or buy call and put options.
•
Order
An order is an instruction, from a client to a broker to trade. An order can be placed at a specific price or at
the market price. Also, it can be good until filled or until close of business.
•
Overnight Position
A trade that remains open until the next business day.
•
Points, Pips
The term used in currency market to represent the smallest incremental move an exchange rate can make. Depending
on context, normally one basis point (0.0001 in the case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and .01 in the case of
USD/JPY).
•
Position
A position is a trading view expressed by buying or selling. It can refer to the amount of a currency either
owned or owed by an investor.
•
Premium
In the currency markets, it is the amount of points added to the spot price to determine a forward or futures
price.
•
Profit/Loss (P&L)
The actual "realized" gain or loss resulting from trading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical
"unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.
Q
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
R
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
Quote
An indicative market price; shows the highest bid and/or lowest ask price available on a security at any given
time.
•
Rally
A recovery in price after a period of decline.
•
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.
•
Rate
The price of one currency in terms of another.
•
Repo - Re-purchase
This type of trade involves the sale and later re-purchase of an instrument, at a specified time and date.
Occurs in the short-term money market.
•
Resistance
A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which a currency will have the inability
to cross above. Recurring failure for the price to move above that point produces a pattern that can usually be
shaped by a straight line.
•
Risk Management
To hedge one's risk they will employ financial analysis and trading techniques.
•
Roll-Over
Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is
based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.
S
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
T
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
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
To go `short` is to have sold an instrument without actually owning it, and to hold a short position with
expectations that the price will decline so it can be bought back in the future at a profit.
•
Short Position
An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold,
the position is said to be short.
•
Spot
A transaction that occurs immediately, but the funds will usually change hands within two days after deal is
struck.
•
Spot Price
The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
•
Spread
The difference between the bid and offer (ask) prices; used to measure market liquidity. Narrower spreads
usually signify high liquidity.
•
Stop Loss Order
An order to buy/sell at an agreed price. One could also have a pre-arranged stop order, whereby an open position
is automatically liquidated when a specified price is reached or passed.
•
Support Levels
A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given
exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.
•
Swap
A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward
exchange rate.
•
Technical Analysis
An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open
interest, etc.
•
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
•
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next)
Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.
•
Two Way Price
Both the bid and ask rate is quoted for a Forex transaction.
U
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
V
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
•
US Prime Rate
The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
•
Value Date
The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e.,
exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also
known as maturity date.
•
Volatility
A statistical measure of a market or a security's price movements over time and is calculated by using standard
deviation. Associated with high volatility is a high degree of risk.
•
Volume
The number, or value, of securities traded during a specific period.
Trading FOREX/ CFDs involves considerable risk of loss of the entire investment. Read more