G7 - The seven leading industrial
countries, being US , Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.
Going Long - The purchase of a stock,
commodity, or currency for investment or speculation.
Going Short - The selling of a currency or
instrument not owned by the seller.
Gross Domestic Product - Total value of a country's
output, income or expenditure produced within the country's physical borders.
Gross National Product - Gross domestic product plus
income earned from investment or work abroad.
Good 'Til Cancelled Order (GTC) - An order to buy or sell at a
specified price. This order remains open until filled or until the client
cancels.
Hedge - A position or combination of
positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.
"Hit the bid" - Acceptance of purchasing at the
offer or selling at the bid.
Inflation - An economic condition whereby
prices for consumer goods rise, 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.
Kiwi - Slang for the New Zealand dollar
Leading Indicators - Statistics that are considered to
predict future economic activity.
Leverage - Also called margin. The ratio of
the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.
LIBOR - The London Inter-Bank Offered
Rate. Banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.
Limit order - An order with restrictions on the
maximum price to be paid or the minimum price to be received. As an example, if
the current price of USD/YEN is 117.00/05, then a limit order to buy USD would
be at a price below 102. (ie 116.50)
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 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.
Lot - A unit to measure the amount of
the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer numbe
Margin - The required equity that an
investor must deposit to collateralize a position.
Margin Call - A request from a broker or dealer
for additional funds or other collateral to guarantee performance on a position
that has moved against the customer.
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 Risk - Exposure to changes in market
prices.
Mark-to-Market - Process of re-evaluating all open
positions with the current market prices. These new values then determine
margin requirements.
Maturity - The date for settlement or expiry
of a financial instrument.
Net Position - The amount of currency bought or
sold which have not yet been offset by opposite transactions.
Offsetting transaction - A trade with which serves to
cancel or offset some or all of the market risk of an
open position.
One Cancels the Other Order (OCO) - A designation for two orders
whereby one part of the two orders is executed the other is automatically
cancelled.
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.
Over the Counter (OTC) - Used to describe any transaction
that is not conducted over an exchange.
Overnight Position - A trade that remains open until
the next business day.
Order - An instruction to execute a trade
at a specified rate.
Pips - The smallest unit of price for
any foreign currency. Digits added to or subtracted from the fourth decimal
place, i.e. 0.0001. Also called Points.
Political Risk - Exposure to changes in
governmental policy which will have an adverse effect on an investor's
position.
Position - The netted total holdings of a
given currency.
Premium - In the currency markets,
describes the amount by which the forward or futures price exceed the spot
price.
Price Transparency - Describes quotes to which every
market participant has equal access.
Profit /Loss or "P/L" or
Gain/Loss - The actual "realized"
gain or loss resulting fromtrading activities on Closed Positions, plus the
theoretical "unrealized" gain or loss on Open Positions that have
been Mark-to-Market.
Quote - An indicative market price,
normally used for information purposes only.
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, typically used for dealing purposes.
Resistance - A term used in technical analysis
indicating a specific price level at which analysis concludes people will sell.
Revaluation - An increase in the exchange rate
for a currency as a result of central bank intervention. Opposite of
Devaluation.
Risk - Exposure to uncertain change,
most often used with a negative connotation of adverse change.
Risk Management - the employment of financial
analysis and trading techniques to reduce and/or control exposure to various
types of risk.
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.
Round trip - Buying and selling of a specified
amount of currency.
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 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 Price - The current market price.
Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.
Spread - The difference between the bid
and offer prices.
Square - Purchase and sales are in balance
and thus the dealer has no open position.
Sterling - slang for British Pound.
Stop Loss Order - Order type whereby an open
position is automatically liquidated at a specific price. Often used to
minimize exposure to losses if the market moves against an investor's position.
As an example, if an investor is long USD at 156.27, they might wish to put in
a stop loss order for 155.49, which would limit losses should the dollar
depreciate, possibly below 155.49.
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.
Swissy - Market slang for Swiss Franc.
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.
Transaction Cost - the cost of buying or selling a
financial instrument.
Transaction Date - The date on which a trade occurs.
Turnover - The total money value of all
executed transactions in a given time period; volume.
Two-Way Price - When both a bid and offer rate is
quoted for a FX transaction.
Unrealized Gain/Loss - The theoretical gain or loss on
Open Positions valued at current market rates, as determined by the broker in
its sole discretion. Unrealized Gains' Losses become Profits/Losses when
position is closed.
Uptick - a new price quote at a price
higher than the preceding quote.
Uptick Rule - In the U.S., a regulation whereby
a security may not be sold short unless the last trade prior to the short sale
was at a price lower than the price at which the short sale is executed.
US Prime Rate - The interest rate at which US
banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.
Variation Margin - Funds a broker must request from
the client to have the required margin deposited. The term usually refers to
additional funds that must be deposited as a result of unfavorable price
movements.
Volatility (Vol) - A statistical measure of a
market's price movements over time.
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