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Trading Glosary

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What is Forex Trading?

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Product Sheet

General FAQ’s

Technical FAQ’s

Deposit/Withdrawal FAQ’s

Trading Glosary

Trading Glossary

A

Aggregate Risk

Total amount of exposure a bank has with a customer for both spot and forward contracts.

 

Arbitrage

The simultaneous buying and selling of foreign exchange for the sake of realizing profits from discrepancies between exchange rates prevailing in the market at the same time in different markets.

Ask

The price/rate that a seller is prepared to sell at.

 

B

Base currency

is the currency against which exchange rates are generally quoted in a given country.

 

 

Bear (Bearish)

A trader going short or advocating this action in the expectation of depreciation of a currency.

Bid

The price that a buyer is prepared to purchase at the price of the currency.

Bid-Offer Spread

The difference between the buy (bid) and sell (offer) price of a currency or financial instrument.

Bollinger Bands

A quantitative method which combines a moving average with the instrument’s volatility. The bands were designed to gauge whether the prices are high or low on a relative basis. They are plotted two standard deviations above and below a simple moving average. The bands look like an expanding and contracting envelope model.

Bull (Bullish)

A trader going long or advocating this action in the expectation that the currency will appreciate.

Bullion

is gold and silver that is officially recognized as being at least 99.5% pure and is in the form of bars or ingots.

 
Buying Rate

Rate at which a bank is prepared to buy foreign exchange. Also known as the Bid Rate.

 

C

Candlestick Chart

A type of chart which consists of four major prices: high, low, open, close. The body of the candlestick bar is formed by the opening and closing prices.

Carded Rate

Exchange rate quoted by the trading banks each day for small foreign exchange transactions.

CFDs

A contract for difference (CFD) is essentially a contract between an investor and an investment bank or a spread-betting firm. At the end of the contract, the parties exchange the difference between the opening and closing prices of a specified financial instrument, including shares or commodities.

Chartist

An individual who studies graphs and charts of historical data to find trends and predict trend reversals which include the observance of certain patterns and characteristics of the charts to derive resistance levels, head and shoulders patterns, and double bottom or double top patterns which are thought to indicate trend reversals.

Close Position

Closing a position refers to executing a transaction that is the exact opposite of an open position.

Contract Rate

The agreed exchange rate at which the currency pair may be exchanged on the settlement date.

Commodity

is a basic good used in commerce that is interchangeable with other commodities of the same type. Commodities are most often used as inputs in the production of other goods or services.

Cross-Rate

The exchange rate between two currencies, e.g., AUD/USD.

Currency

The type of money that a country uses. It can be traded for other currencies on the foreign exchange market, so each currency has a value relative to another.

 

D

Dollar

In international finance “the dollar” is always the U.S. dollar. All other “dollar” currencies should be described specifically. i.e. The Australian Dollar.

Derivatives

Derivatives are financial products that derive their value from the price of an underlying asset. Derivatives are often used by traders as a device to speculate on the future price movements of an asset, whether that be up or down, without having to buy the asset itself.

 

E

Exchange Rate

The expression of the value of one currency in terms of another. For example, in the exchange rate AUD/USD0.8950, one Australian dollar is equal to 89.50 United States cents (AUD1.0000 = USD0.8950).

Expiration Date

The date at which an option transaction is expired which is usually 2 business days before the settlement date.

Equity

In trading, equity can mean several different things. However, it usually comes down to the ownership of an asset without any debt involved.

 

F

Forex

is an abbreviation for the term “foreign exchange”. The foreign exchange market is a global decentralized or over-the-counter (OTC) market for the trading of currencies. This market determines the foreign exchange rate. It includes all aspects of buying, selling and exchanging currencies at current or determined prices.

 

G

Gapping

A prominent increase or decrease on a price chart where there is no trading volume between the jump.

GMT

is the meaning of Greenwhich Mean Time.

 
 

H

Hedging

A strategy used to offset market risk, whereby one position protects another.

 

I

Inflation

Continued rise in the general price level in conjunction with a related drop in purchasing power. Sometimes referred to as an excessive movement at such price levels.

Index/Indices

is the market index on which a CFD is based.

 

L

Leverage

Leverage is having the ability to control a large amount of money using very little of your own money and borrowing the rest. For example, to control a $100,000 position, your broker will set aside $10,000 from your account. Your leverage, which is expressed in ratios, is now 10:1.

Liability

In terms of foreign exchange, the obligation to deliver to a counterparty an amount of currency either in respect of a balance sheet holding at a specified future date or in respect of an un-matured forward or spot transaction.

Long Position

Excess of purchases over sales or of foreign currency assets over liabilities.

 

M

Make a Market

A dealer is said to make a market when they quote bid and offer prices at which they stand ready to buy and sell.

Market to Market

The daily adjustment of an account to reflect accrued profits and losses often required to calculate variations of margins.

Market Maker

A market maker is a person or firm authorised to create and maintain a market in an instrument.

Market Order

An order to buy or sell a financial instrument immediately at the best possible price.

Margin

Margin is the amount of money needed as a “good faith deposit” to open a position with your broker. It is used by your broker to maintain your position. Your broker basically takes your margin deposit and pools them with everyone else’s margin deposit and uses this one “super margin deposit” to be able to place trades within the interbank network.

Margin call

is the term for when a broker requests an increase maintenance margin from a trader, in order to keep a leveraged trade open.

Market Spot Exchange Rate

The current or prevailing spot exchange rate in the foreign exchange market.

Monetary Policy

A central bank’s management of a country’s money supply. Economic theory underlying monetary policy suggests that controlling the growth of the amount of money in the economy is the key to controlling prices and therefore inflation. However, central banks’ monetary capability is severely limited by global money movements. This forces them to use the indirect tool of exchange rate manipulation.

Moving Average

A way of smoothing a set of data, widely used in price time series.

 

O

Open position

An active trade that has yet to be closed.

Oscillators

Quantitative methods designed to provide signals regarding the overbought and oversold conditions.

OTC

Stands for over-the-counter, and refers to a trade that is not made on a formal exchange. It is often also referred to as off-exchange trading.

 

P

Pending Order/Entry order

An entry order is one that is used to enter a trade at a specified price level. If the currency pair never reaches that price level then the entry order is not executed.

Pip

The most common increment of currencies is known as the “pip.” Most currency pairs are quoted to four decimal places (0.0001 in case of EUR/USD, GBD/USD, USD/CHF and 01 in case of USD/JPY). For instance, if the EUR/USD moves from 1.28015 to 1.28025, then this represents a one pip movement. For Japanese Yen pairs, 1 pip is the second decimal place of a quotation. If USD/JPY moved from 109.105 to 109.115, then this represents a one pip movement.

Product Sheet

is a document that summarizes the spread, leverage, instruments and trading hours.

Profit & Loss or 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.

 

R

Resistance Point or Level

A price recognised by technical analysts as a price which is likely to result in resistance but if broken through is likely to result in a significant price movement.

Rollover

Rollover is the interest paid or earned by a trader for holding a position overnight. Since every currency trade involves borrowing one currency to buy another, interest rollover charges are part of FX trading. Interest is paid on the currency that is borrowed and earned on the one that is bought.

 

S

Short Position

Excess of sales over purchases or of foreign currency liabilities over assets.

Spot

Foreign exchange bought and sold for delivery two business days after the deal is firmed.

Spread

The difference between the ask (buy)and bid (sell) price.

Stop loss

A stop loss is an instruction to close out a trade at a price worse than the current market level and, as the name suggests, is used to help minimise losses.

Stop Out Level

is a specific point at which all of a trader’s active positions in the foreign exchange market are closed automatically by their broker, because of a decrease in their margin levels, meaning that they can no longer support the open positions.

Swap

A forex swap rate is defined as an overnight or rollover interest (that is earned or paid) for holding positions overnight in foreign exchange trading.

 

T

Take Profit

is an instruction to close out a trade at a price that is better than the current market level and is used to help lock in price targets.

Technical Analysis

is concerned with past price and volume trends and often with the help of chart analysis in a market in order to be able to make forecasts about future price developments of the commodity being traded.

 

V

Volatility

A measure of the extent to which the exchange rate changes over a given period.

 

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