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| 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 first currency in a Currency Pair. It shows how much the base currency is worth as measured against the second currency. For example, if the USD/CHF rate equals 1.6245 then one USD is worth CHF 1.6245 In the FX markets, 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. The primary exceptions to this rule are the British Pound, the Euro and the Australian Dollar. |
| Bear Market A market distinguished by declining prices. |
| Bid Price The bid is the the price at which the market is prepared to buy a specific Currency in a Foreign Exchange Contract or Cross Currency Contract. At this price, the trader can sell the base currency. It is shown on the left side of the quotation. For example, in the quote USD/CHF 1.4565/32, the bid price is 1.4565; meaning you can sell one US dollar for 1.4565 Swiss francs. |
| Bid/Ask Spread The difference between the bid and offer price. Big Figure Quote – Dealer expression referring to the first few digits of an exchange rate. These digits are often omitted in dealer quotes. For example, a USD/JPY rate might be 117.50/117.55, but would be quoted verbally without the first three digits i.e. “50/55″. |
| Book In a professional trading environment, a ‘book’ is the summary of a trader’s or desk’s total positions. |
| Broker An individual or firm that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers 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. |
| Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 An agreement that established fixed foreign exchange rates for major currencies, provided for central bank intervention in the currency markets, and pegged the price of gold at US $35 per ounce. The agreement lasted until 1971, when President Nixon overturned the Bretton Woods agreement and established a floating exchange rate for the major currencies. |
| Bull Market A market distinguished by rising prices. |
| Bundesbank Germany’s Central Bank. |
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| Hedge A position or combination of positions that are reduces the risk of your primary position. |
| “Hit The Bid” Acceptance of purchasing at the offer or selling at the bid. |
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| Kiwi Slang for the New Zealand dollar. |
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| Net Position The amount of currency bought or sold which have not yet been offset by opposite transactions. |
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| Quote An indicative market price, normally used for information purposes only. |
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| 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. |
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| Settlement The process by which of 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. |
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| Whipsaw Slang for a condition of a highly volatile market where a sharp price movement is quickly followed by a sharp reversal. |
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| Yard Slang for a billion. |
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