A:
Aggressor:
A trader dealing on an existing price in the market.
Appreciation:
The increase in the value of
an asset.
Arbitrage:
Profiting from differences in the price of a single currency
pair that is traded on more than one market.
Ask: The
price at which a currency pair or security is offered for sale;
the quoted price at which an investor can buy a currency pair.
This is also known as the 'offer', 'ask price', and 'ask rate'.
Ask Price:
See 'ask'.
Ask Rate: See
'ask'.
Asset:
An item having commercial or exchange value.
B:
Back Office:
The office location, or department, where the processing of
financial transactions takes place.
Base Currency:
In terms of foreign exchange trading, currencies are quoted
in terms of a currency pair. The first currency in the pair
is the base currency. The base currency is the currency against
which exchange rates are generally quoted in a given country.
Examples: USD/JPY, the US Dollar is the base currency; EUR/USD,
the EURO is the base currency.
Bear Market: An
extended period of general price decline in an individual
security, an asset, or a market. Bid: The price at which an
investor can place an order to buy a currency pair; the quoted
price where an investor can sell a currency pair. This is
also known as the 'bid price' and 'bid rate'.
Bid/Ask Spread:
The point difference between
the bid and offer (ask) price.
Big Figure: The
first two or three digits of a foreign exchange price or rate.Examples:
USD/JPY rate of 108.05/10 the big figure is 108. EUR/USD price
of .8325/28 the big figure is .83
Bull Market: A market that is
on a consistent upward trend. Buy Limit Order: An order to
execute a transaction at a specified price (the limit) or
lower.
Buy On Margin: The process of buying a currency pair
where a client pays cash for part of the overall value of
the position. The word margin refers to the portion the investor
puts up rather than the portion that is borrowed.
C:
Cable: The British pound/US Dollar
exchange rate GBP/USD.Candlestick
Chart: A chart that displays
the daily trading price range (open, high, low and close).
Carry (Interest-Rate Carry): The
income or cost associated with keeping a foreign exchange
position overnight. This is derived when the currency pairs
in the position have different interest rates for the same
period of time.
Central Bank: A bank, administered
by a national government, which regulates the behavior of
financial institutions within its borders and carries out
monetary policy.
Chartist: A person who attempts
to predict prices by analyzing past price movements as recorded
on a chart.
Closing a Position: The process
of selling or buying a foreign exchange position resulting
in the liquidation (squaring up) of the position.
Closing Market Rate: The rate
at which a position can be closed based on the market price
at end of the day.
Commission: The fee levied by
an institution to undertake a trade on behalf of a customer.
Confirmation: Written acknowledgment
of a trade, listing important details such as the date, the
size of the transaction, the price, the commission, and the
amount of money involved.
Counterpart: A participant in
a financial transaction.
Cross-Rate: The exchange rate
between 2 currencies where neither of the currencies are USD.
Currency: Money issued by a government.
Currency Pair: The two currencies
that make up a foreign exchange rate. IE: USD/YEN.
Currency Risk: The possibility of an unfavorable change
in exchange rates.
D:
Day Order: A buy or sell order
that will expire automatically at the end of the trading day
on which it is entered.
Day Trade: A trade opened and
closed on the same trading day.
Day Trader: A trader who buys
and sells on the basis of small short-term price movements.
Day Trading: Refers to a style
or type of trading where trade positions are opened and closed
during the same day.
Dealer: An individual or firm
that buys and sells assets from their portfolio, acting as
a principal or counterpart to a transaction.
Depreciation: A fall in the value
of a currency due to market forces.
Devaluation: The act by a government
to reduce the external value of its currency.
Discretionary Account: An account
in which the customer permits a trading institution to act
on the customer's behalf in buying and selling currency pairs.
The institution has discretion as to the choice of currency
pairs, prices, and timing-subject to any limitations specified
in the agreement.
E:
Euro: The common currency adopted
by eleven European nations (Germany, France, Belgium, Luxembourg,
Austria, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and
Portugal) on January 1, 1999.
European Central Bank (ECB): The
Central Bank for the new European Monetary Union.
Execution: The Process of completing
an order or deal.
F:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC): The regulatory agency responsible for administering
bank depository insurance in the United States.
Federal Reserve (Fed): The Central
Bank of the United States.
Fill: The process of completing
a customer's order to buy or sell a currency pair.
Fill Price: The price at which
a buy or sell order was executed.
Financial Risk: The risk that
a firm will be unable to meet its financial obligations.
Flat: Term describing a trading
book with no market exposure.
Forward: A transaction that settles
at a future date.
Forward Points: The points that
are added to or subtracted from the spot rate to calculate
the forward rates for a forward foreign exchange transaction.
These points are based on the differential between the interest
rates of the two currency pairs.
Forward Price: (See forward rates).
Forward Rates: The net price
resulting from calculating the forward points and subtracting
them from the existing spot rate. This is the rate at which
a currency can be purchased or sold for delivery in the future.
G:
Good Till Cancelled Order (GTC): A
buy or sell order which remains open until it is filled or
canceled.
H:
Hedge: A transaction that reduces
the risk on an existing investment position.
I:
Initial Margin: The deposit a
customer needs to make before being allocated a trading limit.
Initial Margin Requirement: The
minimum portion of a new security purchase that an investor
must pay for in cash.
J:
Jobber: A trader who trades for
small, short-term profits during the course of a trading session,
rarely carrying a position overnight.
K:
L:
Limit Order: An order to execute
a transaction at a specified price (the limit) or better.
A limit order to buy would be at the limit or lower, and a
limit order to sell would be at the limit or higher.
Liquidity: Refers to the relationship
between transaction size and price movements. For example,
a market is "liquid" if large transactions can occur
with only minimal price changes.
Long: See
'long position'.
Long Position: In foreign exchange,
when a currency pair is bought, it is understood that the
primary currency in the pair is 'long', and the secondary
currency is 'short'.
M:
Maintenance: A set minimum margin
that a customer must maintain in his margin account.
Margin: The amount of money needed
to maintain a position.
Margin Account: An account that
allows leverage buying on credit and borrowing on currencies
already in the account. Buying on credit and borrowing are
subject to standards established by the firm carrying the
account. Interest is charged on any borrowed funds and only
for the period of time that the loan is outstanding.
Margin Call: A call for additional
funds in a margin account either because the value of equity
in the account has fallen below a required minimum (also termed
a maintenance call) or because additional currencies have
been purchased (or sold short).
Mark-to-Market: The theoretical
value of an open position at the current market price.
Market Close: This refers to
the time of day that a market closes. In the 24 hour-a-day
foreign exchange market, there is no official market close.
5:00 PM EST is often referred to and understood as the market
close because value dates for spot transactions change to
the next new value date at that time.
Market-Maker: A person or firm
that provides liquidity making two-sided prices (bids and
offers) in the market.
Market Order: A customer order
for immediate execution at the best price available when the
order reaches the marketplace.
Market Rate: The current quote
of a currency pair.
Market Risk: The risks that occur
when general market pressures cause the value of an investment
to fluctuate.
Maturity: The date on which payment
of a financial obligation is due.
Momentum: The tendency of a currency
pair to continue movement in a single direction.
N:
O:
OCO-One Cancels the Other Order:
A combination of two orders in which the execution of either
one automatically cancels the other.
Offer: The
price at which a currency pair or security is for sale; the
quoted price at which an investor can buy a currency pair.
This is also known as the 'ask', 'ask price', and 'ask rate'.
Open Order: Buy or sell order
that remains in force until executed or cancelled by the customer.
Open Position: Any position (long
or short) that is subject to market fluctuations and has not
been closed out by a corresponding opposite transaction.
Order: A customer's instructions
to buy or sell currencies.
Overnight Position: Trader's
long or short position in a currency at the end of a trading
day.
P:
Pip: The smallest increment of
change in a foreign currency price, either up or down.
Price: The price at which the
underlying currency can be bought or sold.
Price Transparency: The ability
of all market participants to 'see' or deal at the same price.
Principal Value: The original
amount invested by the client.
Q:
Quote: A simultaneous bid and
offer in a currency pair.
R:
Rate: Price at which a currency
can be purchased or sold against another currency.
Resistance: Price level at which
technical analysts note persistent selling of a currency.
Revaluation: Daily calculation
of potential profits or losses on open positions based on
the difference between the settlement price of the previous
trading day and the current trading day.
Risk (Foreign Exchange Risk):
The risk that the exchange rate on a foreign currency will
move against the position held by an investor such that the
value of the investment is reduced.
Risk Management: The employment
of financial analysis and use of trading techniques to reduce
and/or control exposure to financial risk.
Roll-Over: The process of extending
the settlement value date on an open position forward to the
next valid value date.
S:
Sell Limit Order: An order to
execute a transaction only at a specified price (the limit)
or higher.
Selling Short: A situation where
a currency has been sold with the intent of buying back the
position at a lower price to make a profit.
Settlement: The actual delivery
of currencies made on the maturity date of a trade.
Short: See 'short position'.
Short position: In foreign exchange, when a currency pair
is sold, the position is said to be short. It is understood
that the primary currency in the pair is 'short', and the
secondary currency is 'long'.
Short Squeeze: The pressure on
short sellers to cover their positions as a result of sharp
price increases. Spot Market: Market where people buy and
sell actual financial instruments (currencies) for two-day
delivery.
Spot/Next or S/N Roll: The process
of moving the spot settlement value date on an open position
forward to the next valid value date. This process will affect
the profit or loss on the overnight position. The forward
points reflect the difference in interest rates between the
currencies being rolled over.
Spot Price: The current market
price of a currency that normally settles in 2 business days
(1 day for Dollar/Canada).
Spread: This point or pip difference
between the bid and ask price of a currency pair.
Sterling: Another
term for the British currency, 'The Pound'.
Stop (loss) Order: Order to buy
or sell when a given price is reached or passed to liquidate
part or all of an existing position.
Stop Order (or stop): An order
to buy or to sell a currency when the currency's price reaches
or passes a specified level.
Support Levels: A price at which
a currency or the currency market will receive considerable
buying pressure.
Swap: A transaction that moves the maturity date of
an open position to a future date.
T:
Take Profit Order: A customer's
instructions to buy or sell a currency pair which, when executed,
will result in the reduction in the size of the existing position
and show a profit on said position.
Tick: The smallest possible change
in a price, either up or down.
Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next), (T/N), T/N
Roll: The process of moving the settlement value date
on an open position forward from one business day after the
trade date (tomorrow), to the next valid value date (next),
the spot value date.
Transaction Date: The date on
which a trade occurs.
Turnover: The total volume of
all executed transactions in a given time period.
Two-Way Price:
A quote in the foreign exchange market that indicates
a bid and an offer.
U:
V:
Value Date: The maturity date
of the currency for settlement, usually two business days
(one day for Canada) after the trade has occurred.
Variation Margin: Funds, which
are required to bring the equity in an account back up to
the initial margin level, calculated on a day-to-day basis.
Volatility (VOL): Statistical
measure of the change in price of a financial currency pair
over a given time period.
W:
X:
Y:
Yard: A slang word used in the
currency industry meaning 'billion'.
Z:
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