20 Survival Skills For The Trader - The Road to Trading Success is Never a Straight Line.

(1) Know the difference between trading and investing. We are traders, NOT investors. Discipline is doing the right thing at the right time...every time! Survival in this business is dependant on the right decisions.

(2) Don't let losers run! Always use stops (i.e. Initial Stop Losses [ISL's]). Have an absolute limit - like a maximum of 8% of the stock value (taught in the 'PSTS' course). Risk management is very, very important in your trading. Don't be stubborn in holding a position/opinion. Remember, while you may not be wrong often, The Market Is Always Right. The best traders are the first to admit (to themselves and the market) that they made a mistake.

(3) Trade only price pattern set-ups (taught in the Trading Concepts 'PSTS' Course).

(4) Trade for skill, NOT the money. If you're focused on the money aspect of trading...you're not focused on the 'trade'. And SCARED MONEY NEVER WINS!

(5) Concentrate on 2 to 4 stocks at a time (if that's you comfort level). Remember that stocks have personalities, habits and friends...get to know them all.

(6) Focus on your executions. Remember, every execution is a trade. Money is valuable...don't leave it on the table.

(7) Model Yourself After Successful and Experiences Traders. You will be all you can be...but you need to start somewhere. That's where the Trading Concepts 'PSTS' becomes invaluable to you as a trader.

(8) Be Teachable. Learn something new everyday (or at least every week). The 'Losing' and 'Winning' trades can teach you a whole lot.

(9) Remember that even the best of the best traders lose money. Learn to accept your losses and move on to the next trade. That's just part of the business - you will NEVER win 100% of the time.

(10) Use relatively small share size...at least at the beginning. Large wins at the beginning generally means large exposure.

(11) When in Doubt, Get Out (or Stay Out)!! Deal with reality, if it (the stock) doesn't behave like you expected, Get Out Of The Market Immediately!

(12) Learn the difference between gambling and trading: (1) Don't trade a stock just because it's irrationally high or low, (2) no new positions before the market opens, (3) no positions before major market announcements, (4) always use a protective stops (ISL), and (5) always have a high probability trade set-up before putting on a trade (a 'PSTS' for example).

(13) Never, ever add to losing trades.

(14) Don't' overtrade. Trade more only as you get more experience and only if you're Winning. Not the Opposite.

(15) Be Logical, NOT Emotional. Emotions can help destroy you as a trader - be very logical and follow your trading rules.

(16) Exercise Patience. Do not force trades when there are none.

(17) Exercise Diligence. Do your homework and preparation before each and every trade. Be willing to let time do its work. Hard work is required in this business.

(18) Anticipate, identify and take full advantage of momentum in the market. (for example, the 'Extreme Upside & Downside Running Patterns' as taught in this Course).

(19) Always select realistic entry and exit points and write them down. This goes hand in hand with doing your homework and preparation before each and every trade.

(20) Maintain a list of your current open stock trades, monitor them closely, and try to limit them to 2-4 LONG trades and 2-4 SHORT trades.



Disclaimer : Any action you choose to take in the markets is totally your own responsibility. I will not be liable for any, direct or indirect, consequential or incidental damages or loss arising out of the use of this information.

Trading Tips

Never try to fight a trend by taking positions against the prevailing trend.

Though it may be always tempting to buy a stock that is falling with an intention to lower the average cost of acquisition, such a practice should be avoided. This will be tantamount to throwing good money after bad.

Always have a stop-loss and an exit price clearly defined before making a trading decision.

There are several methods to arrive at stop-loss levels. If you are unable to identify a logical or reliable stop-loss level, use a fixed money-based stop method, which fits into your psychological comfort zone.

Never hold on to a trading or investment position that has moved past your psychological zone of comfort.

If you are not disciplined to cut positions on the breach of stop-loss, it could turn out to be a psychologically arduous task to cut those loss-making positions when prices keep moving against you.

Always take care of your losses and profits would take care of themselves.

Periodical profit-booking and re-entry on fresh "buy" triggers are crucial aspects of success in stock market investing.

There is nothing wrong or inconsistent in buying a stock at slightly higher levels after having booked profit earlier.

Keep track of stocks you find are in a long-term upward trend and take positions on fresh "buy" triggers.

The key aspect is to ensure that the long-term trend is intact and there is a valid reason to take fresh exposures.

Even after the stop-loss is hit, investors should not ignore the stock they have been tracking. It may well turn out that the stock could reverse trend and get back to the target zone envisaged earlier.

The stop-loss might have been hit owing to either an incorrect stop loss or a change in the short-term trend.

The stock price may reverse at lower levels and manage to move to the earlier determined target zone.



Disclaimer : Any action you choose to take in the markets is totally your own responsibility. I will not be liable for any, direct or indirect, consequential or incidental damages or loss arising out of the use of this information.

Glossary

A

American Depositary Receipt (ADR): A security that physically remains in a foreign country, usually in the custody of a bank, but is traded in the U.S.

Arbitrage: The simultaneous purchase and sale of similar instruments in different markets to take advantage of price discrepancies.

Ask price: The price at which a seller is offering to sell. See offer.

Associated Person (AP): An individual who solicits orders, customers, or customer funds (or who supervises persons performing such duties) on behalf of a Futures Commission Merchant, an Introducing Broker, a Commodity Trading Adviser, or a Commodity Pool Operator.

Average daily volume: Equals volume for a specified time period divided by the number of business days within that same time period.

B

Back months: The futures contracts being traded that are furthest in the future from the nearest expiration. Also called deferred or distant months. See also contract month, front month.

Bar Chart: A graph of prices, volume and/or open interest for a specified time period used by a chartist to forecast market trends. A daily bar chart typically plots each trading session's high, low and settlement price.

Basis: The difference between the cash market price and the price of the futures contract (unless otherwise specified, the futures price of the nearby contract month is generally used to calculate the basis).

Basis Contract: A forward contract in which the cash price is based on the basis relating to a specified futures contract.

Bear: One who believes prices will move lower.

Bear Market: A market in which prices are declining.

Bear Spread: Selling the nearby contract month and buying a later contract month in an attempt to profit from a change in the price relationship.

Beta: A measure of how a stock's price movement correlates to the price movement of the entire stock market. Beta is not a measure of volatility. See also Standard Deviation and Volatility.

Bid: An expression indicating a desire to buy an instrument at a given price, opposite of the offer.

Breakaway Gap: A gap in prices that signals the end of a price pattern and the beginning of an important market move.

Broad-Based: Generally referring to an index, it indicates that the index is composed of a sufficient number of stocks or of stocks in a variety of industry groups to satisfy certain economic or regulatory criteria. See also Narrow-based.

Broker: A company or individual that executes transactions on behalf of financial and commercial institutions and/or the general public. A full service broker typically offers market information and advice to assist the customer in trading. A discount broker may simply execute orders for customers.

Brokerage Fee: A fee charged by a broker for executing a transaction.

Brokerage House: A firm that handles orders to buy or sell instruments on behalf of its customers.

Bull: One who expects prices to rise in price.

Bull Market: A market in which prices are rising.

Bull Spread: Buying the nearby contract month and selling a later contract month in an attempt to profit from the change in the price relationship.

Buy on opening: To buy at the beginning of a trading session at the opening price.

Buying A Hedge: Buying futures contracts to protect against a possible price increase of cash instruments that will be purchased in the future. At the time the cash instruments are bought, the open futures position is typically closed by selling an equal number and type of futures contracts as those that were initially purchased. See also hedge.

C

Calendar Spread: The purchase of one contract month of a given futures contract and simultaneous sale of another contract month of the same instrument on the same exchange. Also referred to as an intra-market or inter-delivery spread.

Call: An options contract that gives the option buyer the right to buy the underlying instrument at a specified price for a certain, fixed period of time. See also Put.

Capitalization-Weighted Index: A stock index that is computed by adding the capitalization (float times cash price) of each individual stock in the index and then dividing by the divisor. The stocks with the largest aggregate market values have the heaviest weighting in the index. See also dollar-weighted index, price-weighted index.

Cash Commodity: The underlying commodity as distinguished from a futures contract.

Cash Contract: A sales agreement for either immediate or future delivery of the actual security or other underlying instrument.

Cash Market: A place where people buy and sell the instrument underlying a futures contract, such as a securities exchange. The terms "spot" and "spot price" usually refer to the cash market price for the underlying instrument that is available for immediate delivery. A forward contract is a cash contract in which a seller agrees to deliver a specific cash instrument to a buyer sometime in the future at an agreed-upon price. Forward contracts, in contrast to futures contracts, are privately negotiated and are not standardized.

Cash Price: Current market price of the stock or other instrument underlying a futures contract. Also called "spot price."

Cash-Settled, Cash Settlement: Transactions generally involving futures contracts that are settled in cash based on the final settlement price, in contrast to those that specify the delivery of the underlying instrument at expiration.

CBOE Direct: An electronic trading system developed by the Chicago Board Options Exchange, which is used by CBOE for electronic options trading.

CFTC: Acronym for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates commodity futures trading in the U.S. and jointly regulates U.S. security futures markets with the SEC.

CFMA: Acronym for the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which among other actions, permitted trading of security futures in the U.S. under the joint regulation of the CFTC and the SEC.

Charting: The use of charts to analyze market behavior and anticipate future price movements. Typically involves plotting such factors as high, low, and settlement prices; average price movements; volume; and open interest.

Chartist: One who engages in technical analysis and/or uses charting techniques.

Class: A term used to refer to all futures contracts on the same underlying security. For example, all futures contracts on a given common stock are part of the same "class" of contracts.

Clear / Clearing: The process by which a clearinghouse maintains records of all trades and resulting positions, guarantees performance on those positions, and facilitates daily pass through of profits and losses via a mark-to-market process.

Clearinghouse: An entity that settles trades made at an exchange, reconciles clearing member firm accounts each day to ensure that gains have been credited and losses have been collected, and adjusts clearing member firm margins for changing market conditions as appropriate.

Clearing Margin: Financial safeguards to ensure that clearing members perform on their customers' open contracts. Clearing margins are distinct from customer margins that individual buyers and sellers of futures and options contracts are required to deposit with brokers. (See customer margin™) Within the futures industry, financial guarantees are required of both buyers and sellers of futures contracts to ensure the fulfillment of contract obligations. Also referred to as performance-bond margin.

Close: The period at the end of the trading session. Sometimes used to refer to the closing price. It is the opposite of the open.

Commission: The fee charged by a broker to execute trades and maintain records related to these trades.

Contingent Order: An order which can be executed only if another event occurs.

Contract: The smallest unit of an instrument that can be traded. A future is specified by its contract month.

Contract month: The month in which a futures contract may be settled by making or accepting delivery. Also called the delivery month.

Convertible security: A security that is convertible into another security. Generally, a convertible bond or convertible preferred stock is convertible into the common stock of the same corporation. The rate at which the shares of the bond or preferred stock are convertible into the common is called the conversion ratio.

Customer Margin: Financial guarantees required of both buyers and sellers of futures contracts to ensure fulfillment of contract obligations. Brokers are responsible for overseeing customer margin accounts. Also referred to as performance-bond margin. See also clearing margin.


D

Day Trader: A trader who establishes and liquidates positions within one day's trading, ending the day with no open position in the market.

Day Trading: Refers to establishing and liquidating the same position or positions within one day's trading, thus ending the day with no open position in the market.

Deferred Month: The more distant contract month(s) in which futures trading is taking place, as distinguished from the nearby contract month.

Deliver: To transfer a physical commodity or a security to another individual or firm. The holder of a short position in a futures contract that is physically settled must deliver the underlying instrument to the holder of a long position in accordance with the standard delivery cycle specified by the futures contract.

Delivery: The tender and receipt of an actual financial instrument (e.g. shares of a security) in the settlement of a futures contract.

Delivery Month: See contract month.

Depository Trust Company (DTC): A corporation that facilitates transfers of securities and holds securities for member institutions.

Derivative, Derivative Security: A financial security whose value is determined in part from the value and characteristics of another security, the underlying security. For example, a single stock futures contract is a derivative security of the underlying stock on which it is based.

Discount:

1. A future is said to be trading at a "discount" if it is trading at a price less than the cash price of its underlying instrument. See also Parity and Premium.

2. When the issue (or trading) price of a debt instrument is below its par value, it is said to be issued (or trading) at a discount.

Discretionary Account: An arrangement by which the holder of the account gives written power of attorney to another person, often his or her broker, to make trading decisions. Also known as a controlled or managed account.

Divisor: A mathematical quantity used to compute an index. It is initially an arbitrary number that reduces the index value to a small, workable number. Thereafter, the divisor may be adjusted for stock splits (price-weighted index) or additional issues of stock (capitalization-weighted index). See also Dollar-weighted index.

Dollar-Weighted Index: A stock index that is computed by adding the prices of each stock in the index and then dividing by the divisor. In a dollar-weighted index, the component stocks are typically weighted in order to equalize the market value of each index component. This is likely to result in a weighting that is approximately the inverse of a price-weighted index of the same component stocks.

Double Top, Bottom: A bar chart formation that signals a possible trend reversal. In a point and figure chart, double tops and bottoms are used for buy and sell signals.

Down Trend: A price trend characterized by a series of lower highs and lower lows.


E

Electronic Trading: Trading via computer through an automated, order entry and matching system.

Equilibrium Price: The market price at which the quantity supplied of an item equals the quantity demanded.

European Terms: A method of quoting exchange rates, which measures the amount of foreign currency needed to buy one U.S. dollar, i.e., foreign currency unit per dollar. Reciprocal of European Terms is another method of quoting exchange rates, which measures the U.S. dollar value of one foreign currency unit, i.e., U.S. dollars per foreign units.

Exchange for Physicals (EFP): A transaction generally used by two hedgers who want to exchange futures for cash positions. Also referred to as "against actuals" or "versus cash."

Exchange Traded Fund (ETF): An ETF is a basket of securities designed to track an index yet trades like a stock.

Ex-Dividend: A reference to a stock where the value reflects an adjustment for impending dividends. The ex-dividend date (ex-date) is the date after which the stock trades without rights to that dividend distribution. Investors who own the stock on the ex-date will receive the dividend, and those who are short the underlying stock must pay out the dividend. Holders of long single stock futures positions do not receive the dividend, and holders of short single stock futures positions do not pay out the dividend.

Exhaustion Gap: A gap in prices near the top or bottom of a price move that signals an abrupt turn in the market.

Expected Return: The result of mathematical analysis involving statistical distributions of stock prices and their impact on the value of an investment. It is the return in which an investor might theoretically expect to make on an investment if he or she were to make exactly the same investment many times throughout history.

Expiration Cycle: A term referring to the quarterly expiration dates applicable to various classes of derivatives. There are three commonly used cycles: January/April/July/October, February/May/August/November, and March/June/September/December.
Expiration Date: The day on which all open positions in a futures contract are transformed into delivery or receipt responsibilities for the underlying instrument. Often used as a synonym for the last day of trading in a given contract, although the expiration date may not actually be the last day of trading. For example, the last trading date would normally occur on a Friday for a contract with a Saturday expiration date.


F

Face Value: The amount of money printed on the face of the certificate of a security; the original dollar amount of indebtedness incurred.

Fair Value: Normally, a term used to describe the theoretical worth of a futures contract as determined by a mathematical model. See also overvalued and undervalued.

Federal Funds: Member bank deposits at the Federal Reserve; these funds are loaned by member banks to other member banks.

Federal Funds Rate: The rate of interest charged for the use of federal funds.

Federal Reserve System: A central banking system in the United States, created by the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, designed to assist the nation in attaining its economic and financial goals. The structure of the

Federal Reserve System includes a Board of Governors, the Federal Open Market Committee, and 12 Federal Reserve Banks.

Fill-Or-Kill order (FOK): A limit order that must be filled immediately or canceled.

Financial Analysis Auditing Compliance Tracking System (FACTS): The National Futures Association's computerized system of maintaining financial records of its member firms and monitoring their financial conditions.

Financial Instrument: There are two basic types: (1) a debt instrument, which is a loan with an agreement to pay back funds with interest; (2) an equity security, which is a share of ownership or stock in a company. Derivatives of these basic types are also considered financial instruments. See instrument.

Float: The number of shares outstanding of a particular common stock.

Forex Market: An over-the-counter market where buyers and sellers conduct foreign exchange business by telephone and other means of communication. Also referred to as foreign exchange market.

Forward Contract: A cash contract in which a seller agrees to deliver a specific cash instrument to a buyer sometime in the future. Forward contracts, in contrast to futures contracts, are privately negotiated and are not standardized.

Front Month: The nearest active contract month of a futures contract. Also referred to as the lead month, nearby month, or spot month. See also back months.

Fundamental Analysis: The study of supply and demand information to help project future prices. For securities, a method of evaluating the prospects of a security by analyzing accepted accounting measures such as earnings, sales, and assets.

Fundamentalist: One who engages in fundamental analysis.

Futures: A term used to designate all contracts covering the purchase and sale of financial instruments or physical commodities for future delivery on a futures exchange.

Futures Commission Merchant (FCM): A firm or person engaged in soliciting or accepting and handling orders for the purchase or sale of futures contracts, subject to the rules of a futures exchange and, who, in connection with solicitation or acceptance of orders, accepts any money or securities to margin any resulting trades or contracts. An FCM must be registered with the CFTC.

Futures Contract: A standardized agreement, traded on a futures exchange, to buy or sell an instrument at a specified price at a date in the future. The contract specifies the instrument, quality, quantity, delivery date and settlement mechanism. For example, 100 shares of IBM common stock to be physically delivered on December 18.

Futures Exchange: A central marketplace with established rules and regulations where buyers and sellers trade futures contracts and/or options on futures contracts.


G

Gap: A price area at which the market didn't trade from one day to the next. See Breakaway gap, Exhaustion gap and Runaway gap.

Gap Theory: A type of technical analysis that studies gaps in prices.

Give-Up: A transaction in which one clearing firm places an order for execution on behalf of a customer of different clearing firm which ultimately will clear and carry the trade.

GLOBEX: An electronic trading system in use by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). Also used for routing orders.

Good-Til-Canceled (GTC): An order that remains in effect until it's canceled, filled or until the contract expires.

Gross Domestic Product: The value of all final goods and services produced by an economy over a particular time period, normally a year.

Gross National Product: Gross Domestic Product plus the income accruing to domestic residents as a result of investments abroad less income earned in domestic markets accruing to foreigners abroad.


H

Head and Shoulders: A sideways price formation at the top or bottom of the market that indicates a major market reversal.

Hedge: The purchase or sale of a futures contract or other derivative as a temporary substitute for a cash market transaction to be made at a later date. The hedge position is designed to protect the investor from temporary price movements in an instrument that the investor already owns or plans to own. Usually it involves opposite positions in the cash market and futures market at the same time. See long hedge and short hedge.

Hedger: An individual or company owning or planning to own a cash instrument and concerned that the cost of the instrument may change before either buying or selling it in the cash market. A hedger achieves protection against changing cash prices by buying (selling) futures contracts of the same or similar instrument and later offsetting that position by selling (buying) futures contracts of the same quantity and type as the initial transaction. See pure hedger and selective hedger.

Hedging Line Of Credit: Financing from your lender for the purpose of hedging the sale and purchase of an instrument.

High: The highest price of the day for a particular instrument (i.e. stock, commodity, futures price, etc).


I

Implied Volatility: A measure of the volatility of the underlying stock determined by using option prices currently existing in the market at the time, rather than using historical data on the price changes of the underlying stock. See also volatility.

Index: A compilation of the prices of several common entities into a single number. See also Dollar-weighted index, Price-weighted index, Capitalization-weighted index.

Instruments: Products traded on an exchange or in an over the counter market, such as stocks, bonds, or futures contracts. See financial instrument.

Initial Margin / Initial Performance Bond: The amount a futures market participant must deposit into his margin account at the time he places an order to buy or sell a futures contract. Also referred to as original margin. See also maintenance margin.

Interdelivery Spread: See calendar spread.

Introducing Broker: A person or organization that solicits or accepts orders to buy or sell futures contracts or options on futures contracts but does not accept money or other assets from customers to support such orders.

Inverted:

(1) A futures market in which the normal relationship between two contract months of the same instrument is reversed is called an inverted market.

(2) When long-term interest rates are lower than short-term interest rates for debt instruments of similar credit-worthiness, and yields are plotted against term to maturity, the resulting chart is called an inverted yield curve.


L

Lagging Indicators: Market indicators showing the general direction of the economy and confirming or denying the trend implied by the leading indicators. Also referred to as concurrent indicators.

Last Trading Day: The final day when trading may occur in a given contract month. Futures contracts outstanding at the end of the last trading day must be settled by delivery of the underlying instrument or by agreement for monetary settlement (in some cases by EFPs).

Lead Market Maker (LMM): A market maker responsible for making continuous, two-sided markets in the products assigned to it.

Leading Indicators: Market indicators that signal the state of the economy for the coming months. Some leading indicators include: average manufacturing workweek, initial claims for unemployment insurance, orders for consumer goods and material, percentage of companies reporting slower deliveries, change in manufacturers' unfilled orders for durable goods, plant and equipment orders, new building permits, index of consumer expectations, change in material prices, prices of stocks, change in money supply.

LEAPS®: Long-term Equity Anticipation Securities, or LEAPS®, are long-term stock or index options. LEAPS®, like all options, are available in two types, calls and puts, with expiration dates up to three years in the future.

Leg: A risk-oriented method of establishing a multi-sided position. Rather than entering into a simultaneous transaction to establish the position (a spread, for example), the trader first executes one side of the position, hoping to execute the other side at a later time and a better price. The risk materializes from the fact that a better price may never be available, and a worse price must eventually be accepted.

Letter of Guarantee: (1) A letter from a bank to a brokerage firm which states that a customer (who has written a call option) does indeed own the underlying stock and the bank will guarantee delivery if the call is assigned. Thus the call can be considered covered. Not all brokerage firms accept letters of guarantee. (2) A letter issued to the clearinghouse by member firms covering a guarantee of any trades made by one of its customers.

Leverage: The use of a smaller amount of assets to control a greater amount of assets. For example, the use of a relatively small amount of cash to control a futures contract with a relatively high notional value.

Limit Order: An order that can be filled only at a specified price or better.

Liquid: A characteristic of a financial market with enough units outstanding to allow large transactions without a substantial change in price. Institutional investors are inclined to seek out liquid investments so that their trading activity will not influence the market price.

Liquidation: Any transaction that offsets or closes out a long or short position. For example, taking a second futures position opposite to the initial or opening position.

Local: A professional trader at a futures exchange who buys and sells for his or her own account and may sometimes also fill public orders.

Lognormal Distribution: A statistical distribution that is often applied to the movement of stock prices. It is a convenient and logical distribution because it implies that stock prices can theoretically rise forever but cannot fall below zero.

Long: One who has bought an instrument such as a futures contract or stock to establish a market position and who has not yet closed out this position through an offsetting procedure. The opposite of short.

Long Cash: Owning the underlying instrument of a futures contract.

Long Hedge: The purchase of a futures contract to protect against potential price increases in anticipation of a later purchase in the cash market. Also referred to as a buying hedge. See hedge, short hedge.

Lot: The term used to describe a designated number of futures contracts, e.g., a 5 lot purchase. Also called "cars."
Low: The lowest price of the day for a particular instrument (i.e stock, futures contracts, etc.).


M

Maintenance Margin / Maintenance Performance Bond: A sum, usually smaller than the initial margin, which must remain on deposit in the customer's account for any position. A drop in funds below this level requires a deposit back to initial margin levels.

Managed Futures: The industry comprised of professional money mangers known as commodity trading advisors (CTA’s) who manage client assets on a discretionary basis, using global futures markets as an investment medium.

Margin: Funds that must be deposited by a customer with his or her broker, by a broker with a clearing member or by a clearing member with the clearinghouse. The margin helps to ensure the financial integrity of brokers, clearing members and the clearinghouse as a whole. Also referred to as performance bond. See initial margin, maintenance margin, customer margin, clearing margin, margin call.

Margin Call: A call from a clearinghouse to a clearing member, or from a brokerage firm to a customer, to bring margin deposits up to a required minimum level.

Mark-To-Market: The daily adjustment of accounts and margin requirements to reflect profits and losses. Positions are marked-to-market.

Market Basket: A portfolio of common stocks whose performance is intended to simulate the performance of a specific index or other benchmark.

Market Maker: An exchange member whose function is to aid in the making of a market, by making bids and offers for his or her account in the absence of or in addition to public buy or sell orders.

Market Order: An order to be filled immediately at the best price available.

Market-If-Touched (MIT): A price order that becomes a market order when the market trades at a specified price at least once.

Matched Trade: The execution of buy and sell orders that together consummate a trade. A matched trade consists of one or more contracts and occurs when the same price is specified by buy and sell orders, for a specified number of contracts.

Maximum Price Fluctuation: The maximum amount a contract price can change up or down during one trading session, as stipulated by exchange rules.

Minimum Price Fluctuation: The smallest increment of price movement possible in trading a given contract, often referred to as a "tick."

Money Supply: The amount of money in the economy, consisting primarily of currency in circulation plus deposits in banks: M-1 refers to the U.S. money supply consisting of currency held by the public, traveler's checks, checking account funds, NOW and super- NOW accounts, automatic transfer service accounts, and balances in credit unions. M-2 refers to the U.S. money supply consisting M-1 plus savings and small time deposits (less than $100,000) at depository institutions, overnight repurchase agreements at commercial banks, and money market mutual fund accounts. M-3 refers to the U.S. money supply consisting of M-2 plus large time deposits ($100,000 or more) at depository institutions, repurchase agreements with maturities longer than one day at commercial banks, and institutional money market accounts.

Moving Average Chart: A chart recording moving averages of market prices.

Moving Averages: A type of technical analysis using the averages of settlement prices. A moving average is calculated by adding the prices for a predetermined number of days and then dividing by the number of days.


N

Narrow-Based: Generally used to describe a stock index, the term narrow-based indicates that the index is composed of three to nine components, generally in a specific industry group. See also broad-based.

National Futures Association (NFA): An industry-supported, self-regulatory organization for futures and options markets. The primary responsibilities of the NFA are to enforce ethical standards and customer protection rules, screen futures professional for membership, audit and monitor professionals for financial and general compliance rules and provide for arbitration of futures-related disputes.

Nearby (contract) Month: The nearest contract month of a futures contract. Also referred to as the front month, lead month, or spot month.

Notional Value: The underlying value (face value), normally expressed is U.S. dollars, of the instrument specified in a futures contract.


O

Offer: Indicates a willingness to sell at a given price; opposite to the bid. Also called the ask price.

Offset: Selling if one has bought, or buying if one has sold, in effect eliminating one's position in a futures contract. Many futures contracts are offset prior to expiration.

Offsetting a Hedge: For a short hedger, to buy back futures and sell the underlying instrument. For a long hedger, to sell back futures and buy the underlying commodity. See also hedge.

Open, Opening: The period at the beginning of the trading session. Sometimes used to refer to the opening price. Opposite of close.

Open Interest: Total number of futures contracts that have not yet been offset or fulfilled for delivery. Each open position has both a buyer and a seller, but for calculation of open interest, only one side of the contract is counted.

Open Order: Any order resident in the order book, such as a day order or a good-til-cancelled order.

Open Outcry: Method of public auction for making verbal bids and offers in the trading pits or rings of traditional futures exchanges.

Option, Options Contract: The right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell the underlying instrument at a specified price within a specified time.

Option Buyer: One who purchases an option and pays a premium. Also referred to as the option holder.

Option Seller: The person who sells an option in return for a premium and is obligated to perform if the holder exercises his right under the option contract. Also referred to as the option writer.

Options Clearing Corporation (OCC): One of the entities that serves as a clearinghouse for various markets. Also, the issuer of all listed option contracts that are trading on the U.S. national option exchanges.

Order: In most cases, a request for the purchase or sale of an instrument (including execution instructions).

Order-Cancels-Other (OCO): An order that includes two orders, one of which cancels the other when filled. Also referred to as one-cancels-other.

Original Margin: See initial margin.

Overbought/Oversold: A technical opinion of a market which has risen/fallen too much in relation to underlying fundamental factors.

Over-The-Counter Market (OTC): A market where instruments such as stocks and foreign currencies are bought and sold by telephone and other means of communications.

Overvalued: Describing an instrument trading at a higher price than it logically should. Normally associated with the results of price predictions by mathematical models. If an instrument is trading in the market for a higher price than the model indicates, the instrument is said to be overvalued. See also fair value and undervalued.


P
Par, Par Value: The face value of a security. For example, a bond selling at par is worth the same dollar amount it was issued for or at which it will be redeemed at maturity.

Parity: A future is trading at parity if it is trading at the cash price of its underlying index or commodity. See also Discount and Premium.

Performance Bond: Funds that must be deposited by a customer with his or her broker, by a broker with a clearing member or by a clearing member with the clearinghouse. The performance bond helps to ensure the financial integrity of brokers, clearing members and the Exchange as a whole. Often referred to as margin. See initial margin, maintenance margin, customer margin, clearing margin, margin call.

Physical Settlement: The process of settling a futures contract at the expiration date by delivering the underlying instrument. In the case of a single stock futures contract, for example, the holder of the short position delivers actual shares of stock to the holder of the long position. Contrast with cash settlement.

Point and Figure Chart: A graph of prices charted with x's for price increases and o's for price decreases, used by the chartist for buy and sell signals.

Position: An interest in the market, either long or short. A buyer of a futures contract is said to have a long position and, conversely, a seller of futures contracts is said to have a short position. See open interest.

Position Limit: The maximum number of speculative futures contracts one can hold as determined by the CFTC and/or the exchange upon which the contract is traded. Also referred to as trading limit.

Position Trader: A trader who takes a position in the market and may hold that position over a long period of time.

Premium:

(1) A futures contract is said to be trading at a premium if it is trading at a price greater than the cash price of its underlying instrument. See also Discount and Parity.

(2) A future is also sometimes described as trading at a premium compared to another contract month on the same underlying instrument when it is trading at a higher price than the other contract month.

(3) The price an option buyer pays the option seller when purchasing an options contract.

(4) In other financial instruments (e.g. bonds), the dollar amount by which a security trades above its principal or face value.

Price Discovery: The generation of information about "future" cash market prices through the futures markets. Also refers to the economic function provided by futures markets in determining these prices.

Price Order: An order to sell or buy at a certain price or better.

Price Limit: The maximum advance or decline in price from the previous day's settlement for a futures contract in one trading session by the rules of the exchange.

Price Limit Order: A customer order that specifies the price at which a trade can be executed.

Price-Weighted Index: A stock index that is computed by adding the prices of each stock in the index and then dividing by the divisor. In a price-weighted index, the component stocks are typically weighted such that the number of shares of each stock is proportional to the price at which the stock is trading. This is likely to result in a weighting that is approximately the inverse of a dollar-weighted index of the same component stocks. See also capitalization-weighted index.

Prime Rate: Interest rate charged by major banks to their most creditworthy customers.

Producer Price Index (PPI): An index that shows the cost of resources needed to produce manufactured goods during the previous month.

Pure Hedger: A person who places a hedge to lock in a price for an instrument. He or she offsets the hedge and transacts in the cash market simultaneously.

Put: An options contract that gives the holder the right to sell the underlying instrument at a specified price for a certain, fixed period of time. See also Call.

R
Rally: An upward movement of prices following a decline.

Range: The price span during a given trading session or other time period.

Reciprocal of European Terms: One method of quoting exchange rates, which measures the U.S. dollar value of one foreign currency unit, i.e., U.S. dollars per foreign units. See also European Terms.

Registered Representative: A person employed by, and soliciting business for a broker-dealer.

Resistance, Resistance Line: A term in technical analysis indicating a price area where sufficient supply exists such that the price may have trouble rising above that area. See also support.

Retracement: A price move in the opposite direction of a recent trend.

Return (on investment): The percentage profit that one makes, or might make, on his investment.

Risk Arbitrage: A form of arbitrage that has some risk associated with it. Commonly refers to potential takeover situations where the arbitrageur buys the stock of the company about to be taken over and sells the stock of the company that is affecting the takeover.

Roll (forward): Closing out a futures position in a nearby contract month and opening a similar position in a more distant contract month.

Round Turn: A round turn counts both the buy and the sell of a trade as one event. In a typical exchange volume measurement, a one-contract trade between a buyer and seller would be counted as one round turn. From the customer's perspective, a round turn represents two filled orders from his or her brokerage firm - one to take a position and one to offset that position (i.e., same customer, different trades)..

Runaway Gap: A gap in prices after a trend has begun that signals the halfway point of a market move.


S
Scalper: A trader who trades intending to make small, short-term profits during the course of a trading session, rarely carrying a position overnight.

SEC: Acronym for the Securities and Exchange Commission. This government agency jointly regulates U.S. security futures markets with the CFTC.

Security: Common or preferred stock; a bond of a corporation, government, or quasi- government body.

Security Futures: The term for the class of instruments that includes single stock futures and narrow-based indices.

Selective Hedger: A market participant who hedges only when he or she believes that prices are likely to move against him or her.

Selling Climax: An extraordinarily high volume occurring suddenly in a downtrend signaling the end of the trend

Settlement: At the close of the trading session, the clearinghouse determines a firm's net gains or losses, margin requirements, and the next day's price limits, based on the settlement price for each futures contract.

Settlement Price: The official price at the end of a trading session as determined by the exchange. Also referred to as the daily settlement price, except on the last day of trading prior to expiration, in which case it is called the final settlement price.

Short: One who has sold an instrument such as a futures contract to establish a market position and who has not yet closed out this position through an offsetting procedure. The opposite of long. In verb form, the act of taking on a short position.

Short Cash: Describes a trader who needs and plans to buy a cash instrument.

Short Hedge: The sale of a futures contract to protect against potential price declines in anticipation of a later sale in the cash market. Also referred to as a selling hedge. See hedge, long hedge.

Side: A side considers the buy and sell actions of a trade as separate events. Each matched trade, and each contract, has two sides - the buyer side and the seller side. Taken together, these two sides equal one round turn. Measuring matched trade volume "per side" counts volume on each side of the trade.

Sideways Trend: Seen in a bar chart when prices tend not to go above or below a certain range of levels.

Single Stock Futures (SSF): Futures contracts on individual stocks.

Speculator: A market participant who tries to profit from buying and selling instruments by anticipating future price movements. Speculators assume market price risk and add liquidity and capital to futures markets.

Spot: Usually refers to the cash price for a physical commodity that is available for immediate delivery.

Spot Month: See front month.

Spread:

(1) During trading, the difference between the best bid and best offer for a given instrument at a given point in time. Referred to as the bid-offer spread or bid-ask spread.

(2) The price difference between two related markets or instruments.

(3) A position whereby a long position is held in one market and a short position is held simultaneously in a different but related market.

Spreading, Spread Trading: The simultaneous buying and selling of two related markets to hold both a long and a short position - a spread -- with the objective of profiting from a changing price relationship. Examples include: buying one futures contract and selling another futures contract on the same instrument but with a different contract month; buying and selling the same contract month of the same instrument on different exchanges; buying a given contract month of one futures contract and selling the same contract month of a different, but related, futures contract.

Spread Order: An order that indicates the simultaneous purchase and sale of related instruments.

Standard Deviation: A statistical measure of the spread of a distribution. In financial markets, often used as a measure of the price volatility of an instrument - e.g. the magnitude of the daily price changes in a given stock.

Stock Index: An indicator used to measure and report value changes in a selected group of stocks. How a particular stock index tracks the market depends on its composition, the sampling of stocks, the weighting of individual stocks, and the method of averaging used to establish an index. See also Price-weighted index, Capitalization-weighted index.

Stock Market: A market in which shares of stock are bought and sold.

Stop Order: An order to buy or sell when the market reaches a specified point. A stop order to buy becomes a market order when the market trades (or is bid) at or above the stop price. A stop order to sell becomes a market order when the market trades (or is offered) at or below the stop price.

Stop-Limit Order: A variation of a stop order in which a trade must be executed at the exact price or better. If the order cannot be executed, it is held until the stated price or better is again reached.

Strike Price: The price at which the instrument underlying an options contract can be purchased (if a call) or sold (if a put). Also referred to as the exercise price.

Suitability Requirement: A requirement that any investing strategy fall within the financial means and investment objectives of an investor.

Suitable: Describing a strategy or trading philosophy in which the investor is operating in accordance with his or her financial means and investment objectives.

Support, Support Line: A term in technical analysis indicating a price area where sufficient demand exists such that the price may have trouble falling below that area. See also resistance.

Synthetic Call Option: A combination of a long futures contract and a long put, called a synthetic long call. Also, a combination of a short futures contract and a short put, called a synthetic short call.

Synthetic Futures: A combination of a put and a call with the same strike price, in which both are bullish, called synthetic long futures. Also, a combination of a put and a call with the same strike price, in which both are bearish, called synthetic short futures.

Synthetic Option: A combination of a futures contract and an option, in which one is bullish and one is bearish.

Synthetic Put Option: A combination of a short futures contract and a long call, called a synthetic long put. Also, a combination of a long futures contract and a short call, called a synthetic short put.


T
Technical Analysis: The study of historical price patterns to help forecast future prices.

Tick: Refers to a change in price, either up or down. See minimum price fluctuation.

Theoretical Value: The price at which a futures contract or other instrument should trade, as computed by a mathematical model. See fair value.

Time Limit Order: A customer order that designates the time during which it can be executed.

Tracking Error: The difference between the performance of a specific portfolio of stocks and an index or other benchmark to which their performance is being compared. See also market basket.

Trader: A market participant who buys and sells instruments on an exchange or over-the-counter market. See day trader, hedger, position trader, and scalper.

Transaction: This term is context-dependent. From an operational standpoint, it refers to a matched trade, but has other meanings for clearing and systems purposes.

Treasury Bill: A Treasury bill is a short-term U.S. government obligation with an original maturity of one year or less. Unlike a bond or note, a bill does not pay a semi-annual, fixed rate coupon. A bill is typically issued at a price below its par value and is therefore a discounted instrument. The level of the discount depends on the level of prevailing interest rates. In general, the higher short-term interest rates are, the greater the discount. The return to an investor in bills is simply the difference between the issue price and par value.

Treasury Bond: U.S. Government-debt security with a coupon and original maturity of more than 10 years. Interest is paid semiannually.

Treasury Note: U.S. Government-debt security with a coupon and original maturity of one to 10 years.

Trend: The general direction of the market.


U
Underlying, Underlying Security: The cash instrument on which a futures contract is based.

Undervalued: Describing an instrument trading at a lower price than it logically should. Normally associated with the results of price predictions by mathematical models. If an instrument is trading in the market for a lower price than the model indicates, the instrument is said to be undervalued. See also fair value and overvalued.

Unit Of Trading: The minimum quantity or amount allowed when trading. The normal minimum for common stock is one round lot or 100 shares. The normal minimum for security futures is one contract. Each security futures exchange sets the size of its own contracts.

UPTrend: A price trend characterized by a series of higher highs and higher lows.

U.S. Treasury Bill: See treasury bill.

U.S. Treasury Bond: See treasury bond.

U.S. Treasury Note: See treasury note.


V
Volatility, Price Volatility: An annualized measure of the fluctuation in the price of an instrument such as a security or a futures contract. Historical volatility is the actual measure of price movement from the past. It is often expressed as a percentage and computed as the annualized standard deviation of the percentage change in daily price. Implied volatility is a measure of what the market implies it is, as reflected in option prices.

Versus Cash: See exchange for physicals (EFP).

Volume: A measure of trading activity typically expressed for futures exchanges as the number of round-turn contracts traded in a given period, unless otherwise noted. See also average daily volume.


W
Wire House: An alternate term for a brokerage firm.

Writer, Writing: The person who sells an option in return for a premium and is obligated to perform when a holder exercises his or her right under the contract is called the writer of the option. He or she is also referred to as the option seller. The act of making the initial.


Y
Yield Curve: A chart in which the yield level is plotted on the vertical axis and the term to maturity of debt instruments of similar creditworthiness is plotted on the horizontal axis. The yield curve is positive when long-term rates are higher than short-term rates. However, the yield curve is negative or inverted when long-term rates are lower than short-term rates.

IPO

When an unlisted company makes either a fresh issue of securities or an offer for sale of its existing securities or both for the first time to the public. This paves way for listing and trading of the issuer’s securities.


An Initial Public Offering (IPO) is the first sale of stock by a private company to the public. IPOs are often issued by smaller, younger companies seeking capital to expand, but can also be done by large privately-owned companies looking to become publicly traded.

In an IPO, the issuer may obtain the assistance of an underwriting firm, which helps it determine what type of security to issue (common or preferred), best offering price and time to bring it to market.

Also referred to as a "public offering".

IPOs can be a risky investment. For the individual investor, it is tough to predict what the stock will do on its initial day of trading and in the near future since there is often little historical data with which to analyze the company. Also, most IPOs are of companies going through a transitory growth period, and they are therefore subject to additional uncertainty regarding their future value.


Reasons for listing

When a company lists its shares on a public exchange, it will almost invariably look to issue additional new shares in order to raise extra capital at the same time. The money paid by investors for the newly-issued shares goes directly to the company (in contrast to a later trade of shares on the exchange, where the money passes between investors). An IPO, therefore, allows a company to tap a wide pool of stock market investors to provide it with large volumes of capital for future growth. The company is never required to repay the capital, but instead the new shareholders have a right to future profits distributed by the company.

The existing shareholders will see their shareholdings diluted as a proportion of the company's shares. However, they hope that the capital investment will make their shareholdings more valuable in absolute terms.




In addition, once a company is listed, it will be able to issue further shares via a rights issue, thereby again providing itself with capital for expansion without incurring any debt. This regular ability to raise large amounts of capital from the general market, rather than having to seek and negotiate with individual investors, is a key incentive for many companies seeking to list.

Forex



The global foreign exchange market is the biggest market in the world. The nearly USD 2 trillion daily turnover exceeds the combined turnover of the entire world''s stock and bond markets.


There are many reasons for the popularity of foreign exchange trading, but among the most important are, the high liquidity 24 hours a day and the very low dealing costs associated with trading. The market is so large that a handful of players can never influence its outcome


The foreign exchange (currency or forex or FX) market exists wherever one currency is traded for another. It is by far the largest financial market in the world, and includes trading between large banks, central banks, currency speculators, multinational corporations, governments, and other financial markets and institutions. The average daily trade in the global forex and related markets currently is over US$ 3 trillion. Retail traders (individuals) are a small fraction of this market and may only participate indirectly through brokers or banks, and are subject to forex scam.


Market size and liquidity

The foreign exchange market is unique because of

  • its trading volume,

  • the extreme liquidity of the market,

  • the large number of, and variety of, traders in the market,

  • its geographical dispersion,

  • its long trading hours: 24 hours a day (except on weekends),

  • the variety of factors that affect exchange rates.

  • the low margins of profit compared with other markets of fixed income (but profits can be high due to very large trading volumes)

Commodity

YES! You are right… commodities means rice, wheat, sugar, gold etc. And did you know that you could trade these commodities without owning a piece of the commodity you trade in.


Commodities, which you have been eating or using all this years or donning it as a fashion accessory or even running you car with, can be now traded on the Indian exchanges. It has always been traded in the Global exchanges, now it is your turn to experience the power of commodities.


A commodity is something for which there is demand, but which is supplied without qualitative differentiation across a given market. Characteristic of commodities is that their prices are determined as a function of their market as a whole. Well-established physical commodities have actively traded spot and derivative markets. Generally, these are basic resources and agricultural products such as iron ore, crude oil, coal, ethanol, sugar, soybeans, aluminium, rice, wheat, gold and silver. However, the process of commoditization is ongoing as markets evolve. In essence, commoditization occurs as a good or service becomes undifferentiated across its supply base by the diffusion of the intellectual capital necessary to acquire or produce it efficiently. As such, many products which formerly carried premium margins for market participants have become commodities, such as generic pharmaceuticals and silicon chips.

Linguistically, the word commodity came into use in English in the 15th century, derived from the French word "commodité", similar in meaning to "convenience" in terms of quality of services. The Latin root meaning is commoditas, referring variously to the appropriate measure of something; a fitting state, time or condition; a good quality; efficaciousness or propriety; and advantage, or benefit. The German equivalent is die Ware, i.e. wares or goods offered for sale. The French equivalent is "produit de base" like energy, goods, or industrial raw materials.


In the original and simplified sense, commodities were things of value, of uniform quality, that were produced in large quantities by many different producers; the items from each different producer are considered equivalent. It is the contract and this underlying standard that define the commodity, not any quality inherent in the product.

Mutual Fund

What is it about investing that irks you most? Is it the fact that it is time-consuming since it involves researching the market for investment products and then proceeding with the paperwork involved?


Fund operated by an investment company that raises money from shareholders and invests it in stocks, bonds, options, commodities or money market securities. (see Investment Company)


A mutual fund is a professionally-managed form of collective investments that pools money from many investors and invests it in stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, and/or other securities.[1] In a mutual fund, the fund manager, who is also known as the portfolio manager, trades the fund's underlying securities, realizing capital gains or losses, and collects the dividend or interest income. The investment proceeds are then passed along to the individual investors. The value of a share of the mutual fund, known as the net asset value per share (NAV), is calculated daily based on the total value of the fund divided by the number of shares currently issued and outstanding.


Types of mutual funds

Open-end fund

The term mutual fund is the common name for an open-end investment company. Being open-ended means that, at the end of every day, the fund issues new shares to investors and buys back shares from investors wishing to leave the fund.

Mutual funds may be legally structured as corporations or business trusts but in either instance are classed as open-end investment companies by the SEC.

Other funds have a limited number of shares; these are either closed-end funds or unit investment trusts, neither of which is a mutual fund.

Exchange-traded funds

A relatively recent innovation, the exchange traded fund (ETF), is often formulated as an open-end investment company. ETFs combine characteristics of both mutual funds and closed-end funds. An ETF usually tracks a stock index (see Index funds). Shares are issued or redeemed by institutional investors in large blocks (typically of 50,000). Investors typically purchase shares in small quantities through brokers at a small premium or discount to the net asset value; this is how the institutional investor makes its profit. Because the institutional investors handle the majority of trades, ETFs are more efficient than traditional mutual funds (which are continuously issuing new securities and redeeming old ones, keeping detailed records of such issuance and redemption transactions, and, to effect such transactions, continually buying and selling securities and maintaining liquidity position) and therefore tend to have lower expenses. ETFs are traded throughout the day on a stock exchange, just like closed-end funds.

Exchange traded funds are also valuable for foreign investors who are often able to buy and sell securities traded on a stock market, but who, for regulatory reasons, are unable to participate in traditional US mutual funds.

Equity funds

Equity funds, which consist mainly of stock investments, are the most common type of mutual fund. Equity funds hold 50 percent of all amounts invested in mutual funds in the United States. [5] Often equity funds focus investments on particular strategies and certain types of issuers.

Derivatives

Derivative products have been around for a long, long time. In fact, as early as the 1650s, dealings resembling present day derivative market transactions were seen in rice markets in Osaka, Japan.
The first leap towards an organized derivatives market came in 1848, when the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), the largest derivative exchange in the world, was established.


Today, equity and commodity derivative markets are rapidly gaining in size in India. In terms of popularity too, these markets are catching on like a forest fire. So, what are these markets all about? What are the products that they trade in? Why do people feel the need to trade in such products and what sort of traders benefit from such trades? Do these markets hold scope for retail investors too? And if so, how exactly can you go about trading in them?

Types of Derivatives
The most popular derivative products are Forwards, Futures, Options, Warrants and Swaps. These are discussed below:


Forwards
A forward contract or ‘forward’ is an agreement between two parties, wherein one will sell an asset to the other on a certain future date at an agreed price.


Futures
Futures contracts or ‘futures’ are an improvement over forward contracts as they are standardized and tradable.


Options
An option is a contract where the writer of the option grants the buyer of the option the right to purchase


Warrants
A warrant is a call option, which gives you the right (but you are not obliged) to buy a predetermined number of equity shares within a stipulated time frame at an agreed price.


Swaps
A swap is an agreement between two parties to exchange their cash flow streams, without liquidating the asset that generates those flows.

Equity

Equity is a share in the ownership of a company. It represents a claim on the company''s assets and earnings. As you acquire more stock, your ownership stake in the company increases. The terms share, equity and stock mean the same thing and can be used interchangeably.



Holding a company''s stock means that you are one of the many owners (shareholders) of a company, and, as such, you have a claim (to the extent of your holding) to everything the company owns. Yes, this means that technically, you own a portion of every piece of furniture; every trademark; every contract, etc. of the company.
As an owner, you are entitled to your share of the company''s earnings as well as any voting rights attached to the stock.



Another extremely important feature of equity is its limited liability, which means that, as a part-owner of the company, you are not personally liable if the company is not able to pay its debts. In case of other entities such as partnerships, if the partnership goes bankrupt, the partners are personally liable towards the creditors/lenders and they may have to sell off their personal assets like their house, car, furniture, etc., to make good the loss. In case of holding equity shares, the maximum value you can lose is the value of your investment.
Even if a company of which you are a shareholder goes bankrupt, you can never lose your personal assets.



Equity Basics


The investor interested in equity securities should first have a firm understanding of what equity is. Equity can be defined as ownership of, or investment in, property. Property may include such things as art, race horses, computer chips, lumber, automobiles or just about anything to which legal ownership may be demonstrated.



OVERVIEW

Basic Trading Concepts Tutorial


If you decide to become a trader, it's difficult to just jump into a market and be one. Before you can even move into the nuts and bolts of trading, there are some basic concepts you need to understand – the idea of trading itself, your perception of trading, your resources, the use of money, the role you play in the trading process and a number of other items that deal mainly with the trader and not the trading.


The trading issues – trading instruments available, how markets work and other trading basics – are covered in the next tutorial. You may think you can just breeze through these first two tutorials, but they are the foundation of your trading education.


That headline may sound like a strange way to start a tutorial, but when it comes to something as complex as trading, it is important to acknowledge the preconceived notions you may have about trading and to understand that you probably have much to learn about this complex subject, especially if you intend to master what could be the most difficult undertaking you will ever attempt.

First and foremost, despite what you may have heard or read about trading being an easy, get-rich-quick scheme, the truth is that there are no trading secrets and no easy paths to quick success in trading markets. Beware of anyone who tries to tell (or sell) you such. It's no coincidence that trading markets is similar to most other human endeavors: Hard work and experience are required to achieve notable success. By the same token, understanding the process of trading can be achieved with perseverance and a willingness to continue to learn.

Ironically, a major advantage of being an experienced trader is knowing what you don't know about markets and trading. There are certain elements of trading that you may never know nor understand, like knowing for sure what a market is going to do in the future. Market analysis and trading is not a business of bold predictions but one of exploring market probabilities based upon market knowledge, price history, human behavior and trading experience.

Knowing that you don't know exactly what a market will do actually gives you a trading edge because it means you probably will exercise more caution and think about and plan for what could happen if a trade turns against you. Successful traders know that some trades will turn against them and that they need to take steps to preserve capital to trade another day.

Anyone who plans to trade for a while absolutely must respect the markets. Most people do not like to be "wrong," but only the market is 100 percent right. Traders who think they "know" exactly what a market will do are not showing the markets respect.


Click on the following concepts to know about that.


Equity


Derivatives


Mutual Fund


Commodities


Forex


IPO


Glossary