FOREX
GLOSSARY
Actuals
- The underlying assets or instruments that 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.
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 differential, the exchange rate differential
or swap points.
Ask
- The price at which the currency or instrument is offered.
At-the-money
- An option contract with a strike price at (or very close
to) the underlying rate; also, the closest strike price to
the underlying rate.
Authorized
dealer - A financial institution or bank authorized
to deal in foreign exchange.
Backwardation
- Term referring to the amount that the spot price exceeds
the forward price.
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 - The currency in which the operating results
of the bank or institution are reported.
Basis
- The difference between the cash price and futures price.
Basis
trading - Taking opposite positions in cash and futures
market with the intention of profiting from favorable movements
in the basis.
Bear
market - A prolonged period of generally falling
prices.
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 normally refers to transferring the trading of the
bank's positions to another office at the close of the day,
e.g. from London to New York.
Broker
- An agent, who executes orders to buy and sell currencies
and related instruments either for a commission or on a spread.
Brokers are agents working on commission and not principals
or agents acting on their own account. In the foreign exchange
market brokers tend to act as intermediaries between banks
bringing buyers and sellers together for a commission paid
by the initiator or by both parties. There are four or five
major global brokers operating through subsidiaries, affiliates
and partners in many countries.
Bull
market - A prolonged period of generally rising prices.
Bundesbank
- Central Bank of Germany.
Buying
Rate – The Rate at which, the market and a
market maker in particular is willing to buy the currency.
Sometimes called bid rate.
Cable
- A term used in the foreign exchange market for the U.S.
Dollar/British pound rate.
Capital
risk - The risk arising from a bank having to pay
to the counter party without knowing whether the other party
will or is able to meet its side of the bargain.
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. Cash, 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 bank, which is responsible for controlling
a country's monetary policy. It is normally the issuing bank
and controls bank licensing and any foreign exchange control
regime.
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.
Clean
float - An exchange rate that is not materially affected
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 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
- 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.
Counterparty
- The other organization 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 organizations
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.
Credit
risk - The risk that a debtor will not repay; more
specifically the risk that the counterparty does not have
the currency promised to be delivered.
Cross
rates - Rates between two currencies, neither of
which is the U.S. 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.
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
- An individual or firm acting as a principal, rather than
as an agent, in the purchase and/or sale of securities. Dealers
trade for their own account and risk.
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.
Delta
- The change in price of an option relative to a change in
the underlying fx spot rate.
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.
Devaluation
- Deliberate downward adjustment of a currency against its
fixed parities or bands, normally by formal announcement.
Dirty
float - Floating a currency when the rate is controlled
by intervention by the monetary authorities.
Easing
- Modest decline in price.
Economic
indicator - A statistic that indicates current economic
growth rates and trends, such as retail sales and employment.
ECU
- European Currency Unit.
European
Monetary System (EMS) - 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.
Exotic
- A less broadly traded currency.
Exposure
- (i) Net working capital - The current assets in a foreign
currency minus current liabilities in the currency; (ii) Net
financial method - The current assets in a foreign currency
minus current liabilities and long term debt in the currency;
(iii) Monetary/non-monetary method - Monetary assets and liabilities
in the foreign currency are valued at present exchange rates,
while non-monetary items are entered at the relevant historic
rates.
Extrinsic
Value - Commonly referred to as the "time"
value and is defined as the value of an option beyond the
intrinsic value.
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 Fed's 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 of the
U.S. comprising 12 Federal Reserve Banks controlling 12 districts
under the Federal Reserve Board. Membership in the Fed is
compulsory for banks chartered by the Comptroller of Currency
and optional for state-chartered banks.
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 revaluations.
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 U.S. 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
- Foreign Exchange.
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. Therefore, 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.
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.
Futures
- Currency (and other commodity) contracts traded through
a regulated exchange such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange
(CME).
FX
- Foreign Exchange.
G7
- The seven leading industrial countries, specifically U.S.,
Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada and Italy.
G10
- G7 plus Belgium, Netherlands and Sweden, a group associated
with IMF discussions. Switzerland is sometimes peripherally
involved.
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.
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.
Hard
currency - A currency whose value is expected to
remain stable or increase in terms of other currencies.
Head
and shoulders - A pattern in price trends which chartists
consider indicating 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 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,
futures or options market.
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 volatility. A 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.
In-the-money
- An option contract that has intrinsic value.
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.
Interbank
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
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, whether payments
or receipts are exchanged.
Intervention
- Action by a central bank to affect the value of its currency
by entering the market. Concerted intervention refers to action
by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.
Intrinsic
Value - The difference between the strike price and
the underlying fx spot contract rate (American Style Options)
or the fx forward rate (European Style Options). The intrinsic
value represents the actual value of the option if exercised.
Please note that the intrinsic value must be zero (0) or above
- if an option has no intrinsic value, then the option is
simply referred to as having no (or zero) intrinsic value
(the intrinsic value is never represented as a negative number).
Kiwi
- Slang for the New Zealand dollar.
Leading
indicators - Statistics 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 with respect
to a balance sheet holding at a specified future date or in
respect of an un-matured forward or spot transaction.
Limit
order - An order to buy or sell a specified amount
of a currency at a specified price or better.
Liquidation
- Any transaction that offsets or closes out a previously
established position.
Liquidity
- The ability of a market to accept large transactions.
Maintenance
margin - The minimum margin which an investor must
keep on deposit in a margin account at all times with respect
to 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 demand for additional funds to be deposited
in a margin account to meet margin requirements because of
adverse future price movements.
Margin
- For currencies, a deposit made to the forex firm on establishing
a futures position account.
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 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.
Minimum
price fluctuation - The smallest increment of market
price movement possible in a given futures contract.
Moving
average - A way of smoothing a set of data, widely
used in price time series.
Net
Position - The amount of currency bought or sold
which have not yet been offset by opposite transactions.
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.
Option
Contract - A financial contract giving the buyer
the right, but not the obligation, to purchase or sell a specific
forex contract (the underlying) at a specific price (the strike
price) on or before a specific date (the expiration date).
The amount the buyer pays to the seller for the contract rights
is called the "premium."
Option
Premium - The amount the buyer pays to the seller
for the rights of an option contract.
Out-of-the-money
- An option contract having no intrinsic value.
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.
Parity
- The equivalent value of one currency in terms of another;
also, sometimes used as a synonym for currency pair.
Pegged
- A system where a currency moves in line with another currency.
Some pegs are strict while others have bands of movement.
Pip
- Minimum fluctuation or smallest increment of price
movement.
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.
Quote
- An indicative price. The price quoted for information
purposes but not to deal.
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.
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 organization. With respect to foreign exchange, involves
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.
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 by which an executed order must be
settled by the transference of instruments or currencies and
funds between buyer and seller.
Settlement
risk - Risk associated with the non-settlement of
the transaction by the counter party.
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.
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
- (1) 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.
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
sales or purchases of currency without major moves.
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.
Stop
loss order - Order given to ensure that, should a
currency weaken by a certain percentage, a short position
will be covered even though this involves taking a loss. Realize
profit orders are less common.
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 downward 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.
Technical
correction - An adjustment to price not based on
market sentiment but on technical factors such as volume and
charting.
Thin
market - A market in which trading volume is low
and in which bid and ask quotes are wide and the liquidity
of the instrument traded is low.
Tick
- A minimum change in price, up or down.
Time
Value - see "Extrinsic Value."
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-Way
quotation - When a dealer quotes both buying and
selling rates for foreign exchange transactions.
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.
Uptick
- A transaction executed at a price greater than the previous
transaction.
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 center
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.
Volatility
- A measure of the amount by which an asset price is expected
to fluctuate over a given period.
Wash
trade - A matched deal which produces neither a gain
nor a loss.
Whipsaw
- Term for where a trader takes a position, then experiences
a move against it, triggering stop loss limits and liquidation
of positions, followed by a reversal and move in the original
direction. Normally occurs in volatile markets.
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