Appreciation
Describes a currency strengthening in response to
market demand rather than by official action.
Ask Price
Ask is the lowest price acceptable to the buyer.
Back Office
Settlement and related processes.
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.
Base Rate
A term used in the UK for the rate used by banks
to calculate the interest rate to borrowers. Top
quality borrowers will pay a small amount over base.
Basis Point
One per cent of one per cent.
Bear
A person who believes that prices will decline.
Bid Price
Bid is the highest price that the seller is offering
for the particular currency at a particular moment;
the difference between the ask and the bid price
is the spread. Together, the two prices constitute
a quotation. The bid-ask spread is stated as a percentage
cost of transacting in the foreign.
Big Figure
Refers normally to the first three digits of an
exchange rate that dealers treat as understood in
quoting. For example a quote of "30/40"
on dollar mark could indicates a price of 1.5530/40BIS:
Bank of International Settlement.
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
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
A person who believes that prices will rise.
Bull Market
A market characterized by rising prices.
Cable
A term used in the foreign exchange market for the
US Dollar/British Pound rate.
Central Bank
A central bank provides financial and banking services
for a country's government and commercial banks.
It implements the government's monetary policy,
as well, by changing interest rates. Reserve Bank
of India is the central bank of India which performs
the role of maintaining orderly conditions in the
forex market by intervention through various instruments
like cash reserve ratio, bank rate, open market
operations and moralisation.
CHAPS
Clearing House Automated Payment System.
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.
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 customer or bank with which a foreign exchange
deal is executed.
Cross Rate
An exchange rate between two currencies, usually
constructed from the individual exchange rates of
the two currencies, as most currencies are quoted
against the dollar.
Currency
The type of money that a country uses. It can be
traded for other currencies on the foreign exchange
market, so each currency has a value relative to
another.
Currency Basket
Various weightings of other currencies grouped together
in relation to a basket currency(e.g. ECU or SDR).
Sometimes used by currencies to fix their rate often
on a trade weighted basket.
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. This is in contrast to brokers who trade
only on behalf of their clients.
Deficit
Shortfall in the balance of trade, balance of payments,
or government budgets.
Delivery
The settlement of a transaction by receipt or tender
of a financial instrument or currency.
Delivery Date
The date of maturity of a contract, when the final
settlement of transaction is made by exchanging
the currencies. This date is more commonly known
as the value date.
Details
All the information required to finalise a foreign
exchange transaction, i.e. name, rate, dates, and
point of delivery.
Discount
Less than the spot price example: forward discount.
EFT
Electronic Fund Transfer.
EMS
European Monetary System.
European Union
The group formerly known as the European Community.
Exchange Rate Risk
The potential loss that could be incurred from an
adverse movement in exchange rates.
Exotic
A less broadly traded currency.
Expiry Date
The last day on which the holder of an option can
exercise his right to buy or sell the underlying
security.
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 1980s.
Fixed Exchange Rate
Official rate set by monetary authorities for one
or more currencies. In practice, even fixed exchange
rates are allowed to fluctuate between definite
upper and lower bands, leading to intervention by
the central bank.
Flat/Square
Where a client has not traded in that currency or
where an earlier deal is reversed thereby creating
a neutral (flat) position.
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
An abbreviation of foreign exchange
Forward Contract
Sometimes used as synonym for "forward deal"
or "future". More specifically, for arrangements
with the same effect as a forward deal between a
bank and a customer.
Forward Points
The interest rate differential between two currencies
expressed in exchange rate points. The forward points
are added to or subtracted from the spot rate to
give the forward or outright rate (depending on
whether the currency is at a forward premium or
discount).
Forward Rate
The rate at which a foreign exchange contract is
struck today for settlement at a specified future
date which is decided at the time of entering into
the contract. 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.
Front Office
The activities carried out by the dealer, normal
trading activities.
Fundamental Analysis
Analysis based on economic and political factors
FX
Foreign Exchange.
GTC "Good Till Cancelled"
An order left with a dealer to buy or sell at a
fixed price. The order remains in place until it
is cancelled by the client.
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.
Info Quote
Rate given for information purposes only.
Interbank Rates
The foreign exchange rates large international banks
quote to other large international banks. Normally
the public and other businesses do not have access
to these rates.
Interest Rate Risk
The potential for losses arising from changes in
interest rates
Intervention
Action by a central bank to effect the value of
its currency by entering the market. In India the
intervention by Reserve Bank of India is confined
to the events of extreme volatility.
Kiwi
Slang for the New Zealand dollar.
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.
LIBOR (London Inter Bank Offer Rate)
British Bankers' Association average of interbank
offered rates for dollar deposits in the London
market based on quotations at 16 major banks. Effective
rate for contracts entered into two days from date
appearing.
LIFFE
London International Financial Futures Exchange.
Limit Order
An order to perform a deal at a superior rate to
the current market level. Can be removed on completion
(filled) or cancelled at any time (pulled).
Margin
The required initial deposit of collateral to enter
into a position or foreign exchange trade. This
is held as a deposit on any running contract
Margin Call
A demand for additional funds to cover positions
Market Value
Market value of a foreign exchange position at any
time is the amount of the domestic currency that
could be purchased at the then market rate in exchange
for the amount of foreign currency to be delivered
under the foreign exchange Contract.
Maturity
Date for settlement of the transaction which is
decided at the time of entering into the contract.
Offer
The rate at which a dealer is willing to sell the
base currency. One Cancels Other Order
Where the execution of one order automatically cancels
a previous order also referred to as OCO or 'One
cancels the other'.
Open Position
Any deal which has not been settled by physical
payment or reversed by an equal and opposite deal
for the same value date. It can be termed as a high
risk, high return proposition.
Over The Counter (OTC)
A market conducted directly between dealers and
principals via a telephone and computer network
rather than a regulated exchange trading floor.
These markets have not been very popular because
of the risks both the parties face in case the other
party fails to honour the contract. They were never
part of the Stock Exchange since they were seen
as "unofficial".
Outright Forward
Foreign exchange transaction involving either the
purchase or the sale of a currency for settlement
at a future date.
Pip
See point. (0.0001 of a unit).
Point
(1) 100th part of a per cent, normally 10,000 of
any spot rate. Movement of exchange rates are usually
in terms of points.
(2) One percent on an interest rate e.g. from 8-9%.
(3) Minimum fluctuation or smallest increment of
price movement.
Position
The netted total exposure 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 realise profits.
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.
Recession
A decline in business activity. Often defined as
two consecutive quarters with a real fall in gross
national production.
Reserve Currency
A currency held by a central bank on a permanent
basis as a store of international liquidity, these
are normally Dollar , Euro and Sterling.
Resistance
A price level at which the selling is expected to
take place.
Revaluation
Increase in the exchange rate of a currency as a
result of official action.
Rollover
Where the settlement of a deal is carried forward
to another value date based on the interest rate
differential of the two currencies example: next
day.
Selling Rate
Rate at which a bank is willing to sell foreign
currency.
Settlement
Actual physical exchange of one currency for another.
Settlement Date
It means the business day specified for delivery
of the currencies bought and sold under a foreign
exchange contract.
Short
A market position where the client has sold a currency
they do not already own. Usually expressed in base
currency terms.
Spot
(1) The most common foreign exchange transaction.
(2) Spot refers to the buying and selling of the
currency where the settlement date is two business
days forward.
Spot Price/Rate
The price at which the currency is currently trading
in the spot market.
Spread
The difference between the bid and ask price of
a currency.
Stable Market
An active market which can absorb large sale or
purchases of currency without having any major impact
on the interest rates.
Sterling
British pound.
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.
Realise profit orders are less common.
Support Levels
A price level at which the buying is expected to
take place.
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.
SWIFT
Society for Worldwide Inter-bank Financial Telecommunication
is a clearing system for international trading.
Swissy
Market slang for Swiss Franc.
Technical Analysis
The study of the price that reflects the supply
and demand factors of a currency. Common methods
are flags, trend-lines spikes, bottoms, tops, pennants,
patterns and gaps.
Technical Correction
An adjustment to price not based on market sentiment
but technical factors such as volume and charting.
Tick
A minimum change in price, up or down.
Trade Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
Transaction
The buying or selling of securities resulting from
the execution of an order.
Transaction Date
The date on which a trade occurs.
Value Date
Settlement date of a spot or forward contract. Also
know as maturity date
Value Spot
Normally settlement for two working days from the
date the contract is entered into. Value Today Transaction
executed for same day settlement; sometimes also
referred to as "cash transaction."
Volatility
A measure of the amount by which an asset price
is expected to fluctuate over a given period. Normally
measured by the annual standard deviation of daily
price changes (historic). Can be implied from futures
pricing, implied volatility.
Working day
A day on which the banks in a currency's principal
financial centre are open for business. For Foreign
exchange transactions, a working day only occurs
if the bank in both (all relevant currency centers
in the case of a cross are open).
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