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- A -
Accrual - The apportionment of
premiums and discounts on forward exchange transactions
that relate directly to deposit swap (Interest Arbitrage)
deals , over the period of each deal.
Actualize - The underlying assets
or instruments which are traded in the cash market.
Adjustable Peg - Term for an exchange
rate regime where a country's exchange rate is "pegged"
(i.e. fixed) in relation to another currency , often
the dollar or French Franc, but where the rate may be
changed from time to time. This was the basis of the
Bretton Woods system. See peg, and crawling peg.
Adjustment - Official action normally
by either change in the internal economic policies to
correct a payment imbalance or in the official currency
rate or.
Agent Bank - (1) A bank acting
for a foreign bank. (2) In the Euro market - the agent
bank is the one appointed by the other banks in the
syndicate to handle the administration of the loan.
Aggregate Demand - Total demand
for goods and services in the economy. It includes private
and public sector demand for goods and services within
the country and the demand of consumers and and firms
in other countries for good and services.
Aggregate risk - Size of exposure
of a bank to a single customer for both spot and forward
contracts.
Aggregate Supply - Total supply
of goods and services in the economy from domestic sources
(including imports) available to meet aggregate demand.
Agio - Difference in the value
between currencies. Also used to describe percentage
charges for conversion from paper money into cash, or
from a weak into a strong currency.
Appreciation - Describes a currency
strengthening in response to market demand rather than
by official action.
Arbitrage - The simultaneous purchase
and sale on different markets, of the same or equivalent
financial instruments to profit from price or currency
differentials. The exchange rate differential or Swap
points. May be derived from Deposit Rate differentials.
Arbitrage channel - The range
of prices within which there will be no possibility
to arbitrage between the cash and futures market.
Around - Used in quoting forward
"premium / discount". "Five-five around" would mean
five point on either side of the present spot value.
Asset Allocation - Dividing instrument
funds among markets to achieve diversification or maximum
return.
Ask - The price at which the currency
or instrument is offered.
Asset - In the context of foreign
exchange is the right to receive from a counterparty
an amount of currency either in respect of a balance
sheet asset (e.g. a loan) or at a specified future date
in respect of an unmatched forward Forward or spot deal.
At best - An instruction given
to a dealer to buy or sell at the best rate that can
be obtained.
At or Better - An order to deal
at a specific rate or better.
Authorized Dealer - A financial
institution or bank authorized to deal in foreign exchange.
- B -
Back Office - Settlement and related
processes.
Backwardation - Term referring
to the amount that the spot price exceeds the forward
price.
Balance of Payments - A systematic
record of the economic transactions during a given period
for a country. (1) The term is often used to mean either:
(i) balance of payments on "current account"; or (ii)
the current account plus certain long term capital movements.
(2) The combination of the trade balance, current balance,
capital account and invisible balance, which together
make up the balance of payments total. Prolonged balance
of payment deficits tend to lead to restrictions in
capital transfers, and or decline in currency values.
Band - The range in which a currency
is permitted to move. A system used in the ERM.
Bank line - Line of credit granted
by a bank to a customer, also known as a " line".
Bank Rate - The rate at which
a central bank is prepared to lend money to its domestic
banking system.
Base currency - United States
Dollars. The currency to which each transaction shall
be converted at the close of each position.
Basis - The difference between
the cash price and futures price.
Basis point - For most currencies,
denotes the fourth decimal place in exchange rate and
represents 1/100 of one percent (.01%). For such currencies
as the Japanese Yen, a basis point is the second decimal
place when quoted in currency terms or the sixth and
seventh decimal places, respectively, when quoted in
reciprocal terms.
Basis trading - Taking opposite
positions in the cash and futures market with the intention
of profiting from favorable movements in the basis.
Basket - A group of currencies
normally used to manage the exchange rate of a currency.
Sometimes referred to as a unit of account.
Bear market - A prolonged period
of generally falling prices.
Bear - An investor who believes
that prices are going to fall.
Bid - The price at which a buyer
has offered to purchase the currency or instrument.
Book - The summary of currency
positions held by a dealer, desk, or room. A total of
the assets and liabilities. If the average maturity
of the book is less than that of the assets, the bank
is said to be running a short and open book. Passing
the Book refers normally to transferring the trading
of the Banks positions to another office at the close
of the day, e.g. from London to New York.
Bretton Woods - The site of the
conference which in 1944 led to the establishment of
the post war foreign exchange system that remained intact
until the early 1970s. The conference resulted in the
formation of the IMF. The system fixed currencies in
a fixed exchange rate system with 1% fluctuations of
the currency to gold or the dollar.
Broker - Brings buyers and sellers
together for a commission paid by the initiator of the
transaction. Brokers do not take market positions.
Bull market - A prolonged period
of generally rising prices.
Bull - An investor who believes
that prices are going to rise.
Bundesbank - Central Bank of Germany.
Buying Rate - Rate at which the
market and a market maker in particular is willing to
buy the currency. Sometimes called bid rate.
- C -
Cable - A term used in the foreign
exchange market for the US Dollar/British Pound rate.
Capital Risk - The risk arising
from a bank having to pay to the counter party with
out knowing whether the other party will or is able
to meet its side of the bargain. see Herstatt.
Carry - The interest cost of financing
securities or other financial instruments held.
Cash Delivery - Same day settlement.
Cash market - The market in the
actual financial instrument on which a futures or options
contract is based.
Cash - normally refers to an exchange
transaction contracted for settlement on the day the
deal is struck. This term is mainly used in the North
American markets and those countries which rely for
foreign exchange services on these markets because of
time zone preference i.e. Latin America. In Europe and
Asia, cash transactions are often referred to as value
same day deals.
Cash and Carry - The buying of
an asset today and selling a future contract on the
asset. A reverse cash and carry is possible by selling
an asset and buying a future.
Cash Settlement - A procedure
for settling futures contract where the cash difference
between the future and the market price is paid instead
of physical delivery.
Central Bank - A nations main
regulatory bank. Traditionally, its primary responsibility
is development and implementation of monetary policy.
Central Rate - Exchange rates
against the ECU adopted for each currency within the
EMS.Currencies have limited movement from the central
rate according to the relevant band.
Chartist - An individual who studies
graphs and charts of historic 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.
Clean float - An exchange rate
that is not materially effected by official intervention.
Closed position - A transaction
which leaves the trade with a zero net commitment to
the market with respect to a particular currency.
Commission - The fee that a broker
may charge clients for dealing on their behalf.
Confirmation - A memorandum to
the other party describing all the relevant details
of the transaction.
Contract - An agreement to buy
or sell a specified amount of a particular currency
or option for a specified month in the future (See Futures
contract).
Conversion Account - A general
ledger account representing the uncovered position in
a particular currency. Such accounts are referred to
as Position Accounts.
Conversion - The process by which
an asset or liability denominated in one currency is
exchanged for an asset or liability denominated in another
currency.
Conversion arbitrage - A transaction
where the asset is purchased and buys a put option and
sells a call option on the asset purchased, each option
having the same exercise price and expiry.
Convertible currency - A currency
that can be freely exchanged for another currency (and
or gold) without special authorization from the central
bank.
Copey - Slang for the Danish krone.
Correspondent Bank - The foreign
banks representative who regularly performs services
for a bank which has no branch in the relevant centre,
e.g. to facilitate the transfer of funds. In the US
this often occurs domestically due to inter state banking
restrictions.
Counterparty - The other organisation
or party with whom the exchange deal is being transacted.
Countervalue - Where a person
buys a currency against the dollar it is the dollar
value of the transaction.
Country risk - The risk attached
to a borrower by virtue of its location in a particular
country. This involves examination of economic, political
and geographical factors. Various organisations generate
country risk tables.
Cover - (1) To take out a forward
foreign exchange contract. (2) To close out a short
position by buying currency or securities which have
been sold.
Covered Arbitrage - Arbitrage
between financial instruments denominated in different
currencies, using forward cover to eliminate exchange
risk.
Covered Margin - The interest
rate margin between two instruments denominated in different
currencies after taking account of the cost of forward
cover.
Crawling peg - A method of exchange
rate adjustment; the rate is fixed/ pegged, but adjusted
at certain intervals in line with certain economic or
market indicators.
Credit Risk - Risk of loss that
may arise on outstanding contracts should a counter
party default on its obligations.
Cross deal - A foreign exchange
deal entered into involving two currencies, neither
of which is the base currency.
Cross rates - Rates between two
currencies, neither of which is the US Dollar.
Current Account - The net balance
of a country's international payment arising from exports
and imports together with unilateral transfers such
as aid and migrant remittances. It excludes capital
flows.
- D -
Day trader - Speculators who take
positions in commodities which are then liquidated prior
to the close of the same trading day.
Deal date - The date on which
a transaction is agreed upon.
Deal Ticket - The primary method
of recording the basic information relating to a transaction.
Dealer - One who, as opposed to
a broker, acts as a principle in all transactions, buying
and selling for its own accounts.
Deflator - Difference between
real and nominal Gross National Product, which is equivalent
to the overall inflation rate.
Delivery date - The date of maturity
of the contract, when the exchange of the currencies
is made This date is more commonly known as the value
date in the FX or Money markets.
Delivery Risk - A term to describe
when a counterparty will not be able to complete his
side of the deal, although willing to do so.
Depreciation - A fall in the value
of a currency due to market forces rather than due to
official action.
Desk - Term referring to a group
dealing with a specific currency or currencies.
Details - All the information
required to finalize a foreign exchange transaction,
i.e. name, rate, dates, and point of delivery.
Devaluation - Deliberate downward
adjustment of a currency against its fixed parities
or bands, normally by formal announcement.
Direct quotation - Quoting in
fixed units of foreign currency against variable amounts
of the domestic currency.
Dirty Float - Floating a currency
when the rate is controlled by intervention by the monetary
authorities.
- E -
Easing - Modest decline in price.
Economic Indicator - A statistics
which indicates current economic growth rates and trends
such as retail sales and employment.
ECU - European Currency Unit.
EDI - Electronic Data Interchange.
Effective Exchange Rate - An attempt
to summarize the effects on a country's trade balance
of its currency's changes against other currencies.
EFT - Electronic Fund Transfer.
EMS - European Monetary System.
European Monetary System - A system
designed to stabilize if not eliminate exchange risk
between member states of the EMS as part of the economic
convergence policy of the EU. It permits currencies
to move in a measured fashion (divergence indicator)
within agreed bands (the parity grid) with respect to
the ECU and consequently with each other.
Exchange control - Rules used
to preserve or protect the value of a countries currency.
Exotic - A less broadly traded
currency.
Exposure - In foreign exchange,
a potential for gain or loss because of movement in
foreign exchange rate. There are three primary types
of exposure:
- Economic: The change in future earning power and
cash flow arising from a change in exchange rates.
In effect, it represents a change in the value of
a company holding foreign currency.
- Transnational: A potential gain or loss arising
from transactions that will definitely occur in the
future, are currently in progress, or could have already
been completed. A signed but not shipped sales contract,
a receivable or foreign currency payment collected
but not converted to local currency would all be examples
of transaction exposure.
- Translation: The potential for change in reported
earnings and/or the book value of the consolidated
company equity accounts, as the result of a change
in foreign exchange rates used to translate the foreign
currency statements of subsidiaries and affiliates
known as accounting exposure.
- F -
Fast market - Rapid movement in
a market caused by strong interest by buyers and/or
sellers. In such circumstances price levels may be omitted
and bid and offer quotations may occur too rapidly to
be fully reported.
Fed Fund Rate - The interest rate
on Fed funds. This is a closely watched short term interest
rate as it signals the Feds view as to the state of
the money supply.
Fed - The United States Federal
Reserve. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Membership
is compulsory for Federal Reserve members. The corporation
had deep involvement in the Savings and Loans crisis
of the late 80s.
Federal Reserve System - The central
banking system in the United States.
Fill or Kill - An order which
must be entered for trading, normally in a pit three
times, if not filled is immediately canceled.
Fisher Effect - The relationship
that exists between interest rates and exchange rate
movements, so that in an ideal situation interest rate
differentials would be exactly off set by exchange rate
movements. See interest rate parity.
Fixed exchange rate - Official
rate set by monetary authorities. Often the fixed exchange
rate permits fluctuation within a band.
Flexible exchange rate - Exchange
rates with a fixed parity against one or more currencies
with frequent revaluation's. A form of managed float.
Floating exchange rate - An exchange
rate where the value is determined by market forces.
Even floating currencies are subject to intervention
by the monetary authorities. When such activity is frequent
the float is known as a dirty float.
FOMC - Federal Open Market Committee,
the committee that sets money supply targets in the
US which tend to be implemented through Fed Fund interest
rates etc.
Foreign Exchange - The purchase
or sale of a currency against sale or purchase of another.
Forex - Term commonly used when
referring to the foreign exchange market.
Forex Club - Groups formed in
the major financial centers to encourage educational
and social contacts between foreign exchange dealers,
under the umbrella of Association Cambiste International.
Forward margins - Discounts or
premiums between spot rate and the forward rate for
a currency. Normally quoted in points.
Forward Operations - Foreign exchange
transactions, on which the fulfillment of the mutual
delivery obligations is made on a date later than the
second business day after the transaction was concluded.
Forward Outright - A commitment
to buy or sell a currency for delivery on a specified
future date or period. The price is quoted as the Spot
rate minus or plus the forward points for the chosen
period.
Forward Rate - Forward rates are
quoted in terms of forward points , which represents
the difference between the forward and spot rates. In
order to obtain the forward rate from the actual exchange
rate the forward points are either added or subtracted
from the exchange rate. The decision to subtract or
add points is determined by the differential between
the deposit rates for both currencies concerned in the
transaction. The base currency with the higher interest
rate is said to be at a discount to the lower interest
rate quoted currency in the forward market. Therefor
the forward points are subtracted from the spot rate.
Similarly, the lower interest rate base currency is
said to be at a premium, and the forward points are
added to the spot rate to obtain the forward rate.
Free Reserves - Total reserves
held by a bank less the reserves required by the authority.
Front Office - The activities
carried out by the dealer , normal trading activities.
Fundamentals - The macro economic
factors that are accepted as forming the foundation
for the relative value of a currency, these include
inflation, growth, trade balance, government deficit,
and interest rates.
FX - Foreign Exchange.
- G -
G7 - The seven leading industrial
countries, being US , Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada,
Italy.
G10 - G7 plus Belgium, Netherlands
and Sweden, a group associated with IMF discussions.
Switzerland is sometimes peripherally involved.
Gap - A mismatch between maturities
and cash flows in a bank or individual dealers position
book. Gap exposure is effectively interest rate exposure.
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.
Gold Standard - The original system
for supporting the value of currency issued. The was
that where the price of gold is fixed against the currency
it means that the increased supply of gold does not
lower the price of gold but causes prices to increase.
Golden Mean Math Formula - The
golden mean is a ratio which has fascinated many. It
can be expressed succinctly in the ratio of the number
"1" to the irrational "1.618034..." and is used in GFT's
Echelon Systemâ„¢.
Good until canceled - An instruction
to a broker that unlike normal practice the order does
not expire at the end of the trading day, although normally
terminates at the end of the trading month.
Grid - Fixed margin within which
exchange rates are allowed to fluctuate.
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 " factor income from abroad" -
income earned from investment or work abroad.
- H -
Hard currency - Any one of the
major world currencies that is well traded and easily
converted into other currencies.
Head and Shoulders - A pattern
in price trends which chartist consider indicates a
price trend reversal. The price has risen for some time,
at the peak of the left shoulder, profit taking has
caused the price to drop or level. The price then rises
steeply again to the head before more profit taking
causes the the price to drop to around the same level
as the shoulder. A further modest rise or level will
indicate a that a further major fall is imminent. The
breach of the neckline is the indication to sell.
Hedge - The purchase or sale of
options or futures contracts as a temporary substitute
for a transaction to be made at a later date. Usually
it involves opposite positions in the cash or futures
or options market.
Hedged position - One open buy
position and one open sell position in the same currency.
Hit the bid - Acceptance of purchasing
at the offer or selling at the bid.
- I -
IMF - International Monetary Fund,
established in 1946 to provide international liquidity
on a short and medium term and encourage liberalization
of exchange rates. The IMF supports countries with balance
of payments problems with the provision of loans.
IMM - International Monetary Market
part of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that lists a
number of currency and financial futures Implied volatilityA
measurement of the market's expected price range of
the underlying currency futures based on the traded
option premiums.
Implied Rates - The interest rate
determined by calculating the difference between spot
and forward rates.
Indicative quote - A market-maker's
price which is not firm.
Inflation - Continued rise in
the general price level in conjunction with a related
drop in purchasing power. Sometimes referred to as an
excessive movement in such price levels.
Initial margin - The margin required
by a Foreign Exchange firm to initiate the buying or
selling of a determined amount of currency.
Inter-bank rates - The bid and
offer rates at which international banks place deposits
with each other. The basis of the Interbank market.
Interest Arbitrage - Switching
into another currency by buying spot and selling forward,
and investing proceeds in order to obtain a higher interest
yield. Interest arbitrage can be inward, i.e. from foreign
currency into the local one or outward, i.e. from the
local currency to the foreign one. Sometimes better
results can be obtained by not selling the forward interest
amount. In that case some treat it as no longer being
a complete arbitrage, as if the exchange rate moved
against the arbitrageur, the profit on the transaction
may create a loss.
Interest parity - One currency
is in interest parity with another when the difference
in the interest rates is equalized by the forward exchange
margins. For instance, if the operative interest rate
in Japan is 3% and in the UK 6%, a forward premium of
3% for the Japanese Yen against sterling would bring
about interest parity.
Interest rate Swaps - An agreement
to swap interest rate exposures from floating to fixed
or vice versa. There is no swap of the principal. It
is the interest cash flows be they payments or receipts
that are exchanged.
Internationalization - Referring
to a currency that is widely used to denominate trade
and credit transactions by non residents of the country
of issue. US dollar and Swiss Franc are examples.
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.
- K -
Kiwi - Slang for the New Zealand
dollar.
- L -
Leading Indicators - Statistic
that are considered to precede changes in economic growth
rates and total business activity, e.g. factory orders.
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.
Limit order - A request to deal
as a buyer or seller for a foreign currency transaction
at a specified price, or at a better price, if obtainable.
Liquidation - Any transaction
that offsets or closes out a previously established
position.
Liquidity - The ability of a market
to accept large transactions.
- M -
Maintenance margin - The minimum
margin which an investor must keep on deposit in a margin
account at all times in respect of each open contract.
Make a market - A dealer is said
to make a market when he or she quotes bid and offer
prices at which he or she stands ready to buy and sell.
Managed float - When the monetary
authorities intervene regularly in the market to stabilize
the rates or to aim the exchange rate in a required
direction.
Margin call - A claim by one's
broker or dealer for additional good faith performance
monies usually issued when an investor's account suffers
adverse price movements.
Margin - The amount of money or
collateral that must be, in the first instance, provided
or thereafter, maintained, to ensure against losses
on open contracts. Initial must be placed before a trade
is entered into. Maintenance or Variation margin must
be added to initial to maintain against losses on open
positions. Sometimes herein the amount that needs to
be present to establish or thereafter maintained is
sometimes herein referred to as necessary margin.
Mark 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 authorized 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.
Micro economics - The study of
economic activity as it applies to individual firms
or well defined small groups of individuals or economic
sectors.
Mid-price or middle rate - The
price half-way between the two prices, or the average
of both buying and selling prices offered by the market
makers.
Minimum price fluctuation - The
smallest increment of market price movement possible
in a given futures contract.
Monetary Base - Currency in circulation
plus banks' required and excess deposits at the central
bank.
Moving Average - A way of smoothing
a set of data, widely used in price time series.
- N -
Net Position - The amount of currency
bought or sold which have not yet been offset by opposite
transactions.
- O -
Odd Lot - A non standard amount
for a transaction.
Offer - The price at which a seller
is willing to sell. The best offer is the lowest such
price available.
Offset - The closing-out or liquidation
of a futures position.
Off-shore - The operations of
a financial institution which although physically located
in a country, has little connection with that country's
financial systems. In certain countries a bank is not
permitted to do business in the domestic market but
only with other foreign banks. This is known as an off
shore banking unit.
Overnight limit - Net long or
short position in one or more currencies that a dealer
can carry over into the next dealing day. Passing the
book to other bank dealing rooms in the next trading
time zone reduces the need for dealers to maintain these
unmonitored exposures.
Overnight - A deal from today
until the next business day.
- P -
Parity - (1) Foreign exchange
dealer's slang for your price is the correct market
price. (2) Official rates in terms of SDR or other pegging
currency.
Parities - The value of one currency
in terms of another.
Pegged - A system where a currency
moves in line with another currency, some pegs are strict
while others have bands of movement.
Pip - One unit of price change
in the bid/ask price of a currency. For most currencies,
it denotes the fourth decimal place in an exchange rate
and represents 1/100 of one percent (.01%).
Position - The netted total commitments
in a given currency. A position can be either flat or
square (no exposure), long, (more currency bought than
sold), or short ( more currency sold than bought).
Profit Taking - The unwinding
of a position to realize profits.
- Q -
Quote - An indicative price. The
price quoted for information purposes but not to deal.
- R -
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 - (1) The price of one currency
in terms of another, normally against USD. (2) Assessment
of the credit worthiness of an institution.
Reaction - A decline in prices
following an advance.
Reciprocal currency - A currency
that is normally quoted as dollars per unit of currency
rather than the normal quote method of units of currency
per dollar. Sterling is the most common example.
Resistance Point or Level - A
price recognized by technical analysts as a price which
is likely to result in a rebound but if broken through
is likely to result in a significant price movement.
Revaluation - Increase in the
exchange rate of a currency as a result of official
action.
Revaluation rate - The rate for
any period or currency which is used to revalue a position
or book.
Risk management - The identification
and acceptance or offsetting of the risks threatening
the profitability or existence of an organisation. With
respect to foreign exchange involves among others consideration
of market, sovereign, country, transfer, delivery, credit,
and counterparty risk.
Risk Position - An asset or liability,
which is exposed to fluctuations in value through changes
in exchange rates or interest rates.
Rollover - An overnight swap,
specifically the next business day against the following
business day (also called Tomorrow Next, abbreviated
to Tom-Next).
Round trip - Buying and selling
of a specified amount of currency.
- S -
Same day transaction - A transaction
that matures on the day the transaction takes place.
Selling rate - Rate at which a
bank is willing to sell foreign currency.
Settlement date - The date upon
which foreign exchange contracts settle.
Settlement Risk - Where a payment
is made to a counter party before the counter value
payment has been made. The risk is that the counter
party's payment will not be received.
Short sale - The sale of a specified
amount of currency not owned by the seller at the time
of the trade. Short sales are usually made in expectation
of a decline in the price.
Short-term interest rates - Normally
the 90 day rate.
Sidelined - A major currency that
is lightly traded due to major market interest being
in another currency pair.
Slippage - Refers to the negative
(or depreciating) pip value between where a stop loss
order becomes a market order and where that market order
may be filled.
Soft Market - More potential sellers
than buyers, which creates an environment where rapid
price falls are likely.
Spot - (1) The most common foreign
exchange transaction. (2) Spot or Spot date refers to
the spot transaction value date that requires settlement
within two business days, subject to value date calculation.
Spot next - The overnight swap
from the spot date to the next business day.
Spot price/rate - The price at
which the currency is currently trading in the spot
market.
Spread - (l)The difference between
the bid and ask price of a currency. (2) The difference
between the price of two related futures contracts.
Square - Purchase and sales are
in balance and thus the dealer has no open position.
Squawk Box - A speaker connected
to a phone often used in broker trading desks.
Squeeze - Action by a central
bank to reduce supply in order to increase the price
of money.
Stable market - An active market
which can absorb large sale or purchases of currency
without major moves.
Standard - A term referring to
certain normal amounts and maturities for dealing.
Sterilization - Central Bank activity
in the domestic money market to reduce the impact on
money supply of its intervention activities in the FX
market.
Sterling - British pound, otherwise
known as cable.
Stocky - Market slang for Swedish
Krona.
Stop-Loss order - Order to buy
or sell at the best available price when a given price
threshold has been reached.
Support levels - When an exchange
rate depreciates or appreciates to a level where (1)
Technical analysis techniques suggest that the currency
will rebound, or not go below; (2) the monetary authorities
intervene to stop any further down ward movement. See
resistance point.
Swap price - A price as a differential
between two dates of the swap.
Swap - The simultaneous purchase
and sale of the same amount of a given currency for
two different dates, against the sale and purchase of
another. A swap can be a swap against a forward. In
essence, swapping is somewhat similar to borrowing one
currency and lending another for the same period. However,
any rate of return or cost of funds is expressed in
the price differential between the two sides of the
transaction.
Swissy - Market slang for Swiss
Franc.
- T -
Technical Correction - An adjustment
to price not based on market sentiment but technical
factors such as volume and charting.
Thin market - A market in which
trading volume is low and in which consequently bid
and ask quotes are wide and the liquidity of the instrument
traded is low.
Thursday/Friday Dollars - A US
foreign exchange technicality. If a foreign bank buys
dollars on Tuesday for Thursday delivery. If the bank
leaves the funds overnight and transfers them on Friday
by means of a clearing house cheque then clearance is
not until Monday, the next working day. Higher interest
rates for this period are thus available.
Tick - A minimum change in price,
up or down.
Today/Tomorrow - Simultaneous
buying of a currency for delivery the following day
and selling for the spot day, or vice versa. Also referred
to as overnight.
Tomorrow next (Tom next) - Simultaneous
buying of a currency for delivery the following day
and selling for the spot day or vice versa.
Trade date - The date on which
a trade occurs.
Tradeable amount - Smallest transaction
size acceptable.
Transaction date - The date on
which a trade occurs.
Transaction - The buying or selling
of currencies resulting from the execution of an order.
Two Tier market - A dual exchange
rate system where normally only one rate is open to
market pressure, e.g. South Africa.
Two-Way quotation - When a dealer
quotes both buying and selling rates for foreign exchange
transactions.
- U -
Uncovered - Another term for an
open position.
Under-valuation - An exchange
rate is normally considered to be undervalued when it
is below its purchasing power parity.
Up tick - A transaction executed
at a price greater than the previous transaction.
- V -
Value Date - For a spot transaction
it is two business banking days forward in the country
of the bank providing quotations which determine the
spot value date. The only exception to this general
rule is the spot day in the quoting centre coinciding
with a banking holiday in the country(ies) of the foreign
currency(ies). The value date then moves forward a day.
Value Spot - Normally settlement
for two working days from today. See value date.
Volatility - A measure of the
amount by which an asset price is expected to fluctuate
over a given period.
Vostro Account - A local currency
account maintained with a bank by another bank. The
term is normally applied to the counterparty's account
from which funds may be paid into or withdrawn, as a
result of a transaction.
- W -
Wash trade - A matched deal which
produces neither a gain nor a loss.
Whipsaw - Term for where a trader
takes a position, then has to move against it triggering
stop loss limits and liquidation of positions, then
having to move in the original direction. Normally occurs
in volatile markets.
Working day - A day on which the
banks in a currency's principal financial centre are
open for business. For FX transactions, a working day
only occurs if the bank in both financial centre's are
open for business (all relevant currency centers in
the case of a cross are open).
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