The act of surrendering or giving up. In financial markets it describes the point at which investors and traders stop trying to recapture lost gains or maintain positions in the face of falling or rising prices.
Any market that experiences a fall of around 20% or more from its recent high. Most commonly applied to stock markets, the term can also be used for anything traded, including currencies and commodities. It is the opposite of a bull market.
Read full definitionWhen an event causes the price of a heavily shorted asset to rise rapidly, forcing traders with short positions to add equity to maintain margin or close out by buying back the asset at a loss, which pushes the price higher still.
Read full definitionA description of traders and/or price action acting with conviction.
Read full definitionThe simultaneous buying and selling of the same currency in different markets to profit from small price differences. The strategy exploits temporary inefficiencies in FX markets.
Read full definitionAn instruction given to a dealer to buy or sell at the best rate that can be obtained at a specific time.
Read full definitionAn instruction given to a dealer to buy or sell at a specific price or better.
Read full definitionA third party coordinating the sale of financial securities between sellers and buyers. Exchanges only accept orders from their members, so traders and investors use brokers as intermediaries; brokers are compensated through commissions, fees or payment from the exchange.
Read full definitionTraders who expect prices to rise and who may be holding long positions.
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