Glossary
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An increase in the value of a currency. |
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The price requested by the trader. This usually indicates
the lowest price a seller will accept. |
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The currency that the investor buys or sells (i.e. EUR in
EURUSD). |
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Someone who believes prices are heading down. A bear
market is one in which there has been a sustained fall in prices and which
does not look like it will recover quickly. |
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The price offered by the trader. This usually indicates
the highest price a purchaser will pay. |
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The Bid rate is the rate at which you can sell. The Ask
(or offer) rate is the rate at which you can buy. |
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Someone who is optimistic about the market. A bull market
is characterised by enthusiastic and sustained buying. |
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When trading with currencies, the investor buys one
currency with another. These two currencies form the cross: for example,
EURUSD. |
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An exchange rate that is calculated from two other
exchange rates. |
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A fall in the value of a currency. |
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What one currency is worth in terms of another, for
example the Australian dollar might be worth 58 US cents or 70 yen. |
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Means that you trade EUR against dollars. If you buy euro
you pay in dollars and if you sell euro you receive dollars. |
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All names for the transaction of one currency for another,
e.g. you buy GBP 100.00 with USD 150.25 or sell USD 150.25 for GBP 100.00. |
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Short-term (often overnight) borrowing and lending between
banks, as distinct from a banks business with their corporate clients or
other financial institutions. |
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The yield spread between two otherwise comparable debt
instruments denominated in different currencies. |
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The investor only funds part of the amount traded. |
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To buy. |
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A position that increases its value if market prices
increase. |
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The capacity to be converted easily and with minimum loss
into cash. A liquid market is one in which there is enough activity to
satisfy both buyers and sellers. Ultra-short-dated treasury notes are an
example of a liquid investment. |
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The deposit required when entering into a position as
well as to hold an open position. Your margin status can be monitored in the
Account Summary. |
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The |
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A position in a currency that has not yet been offset. For
example, if you have bought 100,000 USDJPY, you have an open position in
USDJPY until you offset it by selling 100,000 USDJPY, thus “closing” the
position. |
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When trading takes place directly between two parties,
rather than on an exchange. Over the counter trades can be customised whereas
exchange-traded products are often standardised. |
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A pip is the smallest unit by which a Forex cross price
quote changes. So if EURUSD bid is now quoted at 0.9767 and it moves up 2
pips, it will be quoted at 0.9769. |
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Traders talk of “taking a position” which simply means
buying or selling currency cross. “Position” can also refer to a trader's
cash/securities/currencies balance, whether he or she is short of cash, has
money to lend, is overbought or oversold in a currency, etc. |
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Trying to control outcomes to a known or predictable range
of gains or losses. Risk management involves several steps which begin with a
sound understanding of one's business and the exposures or risks that have to
be covered to protect the value of that business. Then an assessment should
be made of the types of variables that can affect the business and how best
to protect against unwelcome outcomes. Consideration must also be given to
the preferred risk profile – whether one is risk – averse or fairly
aggressive in approach. This also involves deciding which instruments to use
to manage risk and whether a natural hedge exists that can be used. Once
undertaken, a risk-management strategy should be continually assessed for
effectiveness and cost. |
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• Secondary currency (variable
currency or counter currency) |
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The currency that the investor trades the base currency
against (i.e. USD in EURUSD). |
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A position that benefits from a decline in market prices. |
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To sell. |
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Buying and selling in the hope of making a profit, rather
than doing so for some fundamental business-related need. |
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A Spot rate is the current market price of an asset. |
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The part of the market calling for spot settlement of
transactions. The precise meaning of “spot” will depend on local custom for a
commodity, security or currency. In the |
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The difference between the bid and the ask rate. |