Interpretation of foreign exchange terms
Trading position
It is a market agreement that promises to buy and sell the initial position of foreign exchange contracts. Those who buy foreign exchange contracts are all bulls and are expecting positions. Selling foreign exchange contracts is an empty position and is in the expected position.
Short, short, short.
It is expected that the foreign exchange market price will fall in the future, that is, a certain number of currency or option contracts will be sold at the current market price, and then the positions will be closed after the price falls, so as to obtain the difference profit between selling at a high price and buying at a low price. This way belongs to the trading mode of selling first and buying later. (Margin is applicable)
Long, buy, long.
In anticipation of the future price rise in the foreign exchange market, traders buy a certain amount of currency at the current price, and hedge their contract positions at a higher price after the exchange rate rises for a period of time, thus earning profits. This method belongs to the trading mode of buying first and selling later, which is just the opposite of short positions.
Liquidation, liquidation
By selling (buying) the same currency, the currency bought (sold) before settlement.
Security deposit (security deposit)
In order to ensure the performance of the contract and the guarantee in case of transaction loss, it is equivalent to 0.5%(200 times) ~ 5% (20 times) of the transaction amount, which will be returned by the customer after the performance, and the loss will be deducted from the deposit accordingly.
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Buy (from Cantonese)
Sell: sell (from Cantonese)
Fluctuation: the extent of currency fluctuation in a day.
Narrow range: fluctuation of 30 ~ 50 points
Interval: the fluctuation range of currency over a period of time.
Location: price coordinates
Up and down: price target. (Above the price is called resistance level, below the price is called support level)
Bottom: an important support level for the next gear.
Long-term: one month to more than half a year (more than 200 points)
Mid-term: one week to one month (100)
Short-term: one day to one week (30 ~ 50 o'clock)
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Unilateral market: about 10 and a half days, the market only rises and does not fall.
Bear market: a long-term unilateral downward trend
Bull market: long-term unilateral upward
Up and down: the currency fluctuates up and down in an interval.
Cowhide market: the market fluctuation range is narrow.
Trading is light: the trading volume is small and the fluctuation is not big.
Active trading: the trading volume is large and fluctuates greatly.
Consumption rising: rising slowly, falling fast.
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Rise and fall: Breakthrough development of currency value due to news or other factors.
Sticking: the disk potential is unknown and the interval is narrow.
Consolidation: after a period of rising (falling), sort out the fluctuations in the interval.
Rebound: in the general trend of price fluctuation, there is a reversal in the middle.
Bottom, bottom: the price falls to a certain place, and it fluctuates little for a period of time, and the range narrows (such as box sorting).
Broken position: break through the support level or resistance level (generally need to break through more than 20 ~ 30 points)
False break: suddenly break through the support level or resistance level, but immediately turn back.
Close: close
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Up and down: testing the price.
Profit-taking: closing a position to make a profit
Panic selling: close your position when you hear some news, regardless of the price.
Stop loss: if the direction is wrong, close the position at a certain price immediately.
Short covering: Originally, it was the stock market, because news or data were sold.
Long covering: the market used to sell the market, but later it changed to sell the market. (Push into the market or close the position)
One-day transfer: originally to sell (sell) the market, in the afternoon to sell (sell) the market, exceeding the opening price.
Selling pressure: selling orders at a high point
Buy gasoline: pay at the reserve price
Stop-loss buying: after selling short positions in the foreign exchange market, the exchange rate rises instead of falling, forcing short repurchase.
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Supplement:
Lock order: one of the common methods of margin operation, that is, the number of buying (selling) hands is the same.
Floating bill: refers to the day (city) after the bill is made.