Trading mostly refers to short-term speculation in the markets. To trade successfully, you need to learn the basics of markets, risk management and money management.
Illiquid Assets: Overview, Risk and Examples
Investor: A person or entity who commits capital with the expectation of financial returns.
What Does aꦓ🥀n Investor Do? What Are the Different Types?
Liquidity
Understanding Liquidity and How to Measure It
Notional Value
Understanding Notional Value and How It Works
Speculation: Conducting a financial transaction that could yield a significant gain or loss.
ไSpeculat𒁏ion: Trading With High Risks, High Potential Rewards
Trading in the Pre- and Post-Market Sessions
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Spot Rate: What It Is, How It Works, Example
Spot Market
Spot Market: Definition, How 🌟They Work, and Example
Know Your Shareholder Rights
Two colleagues discuss charts on their computers at a work table
Average Daily Trading Volume (AD✅TV): Definition, Ho🌳w To Use It
Breakeven Point
Breakeven Po🐷int: Definition, Examples, and How To Calculate
Clearing
What Is Clearing? D💛efin♚ition, How It Works, and Example
Proprietary Trading: A financial firm or bank that invests for direct market gain rather than earning commissions and fees by trading on the behalf of clients.
Proprietary Trading: What It Is, How It Works, ওBenefi𓄧ts
looking up at the skyscrapers in london's financial district
What Is an Ac🦹tivist Shareholder? What They Do and How They Work
Short Covering: Buying back borrowed securities in order to close out an open short position.
Short Coverin🐷൲g: Definition, Meaning, How It Works, and Examples
A person looks down while working in front of a computer screen displaying stock data at the New York Stock Exchange
Tick Size: Definition in Traᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚding, Requirements, and Examples
The reflection of an derivative investor appears on a computer monitor showing the price movement of the underlying stocks they are following.
Underlying Asset (Derivatives)—Definition, How It𝔉 Wo๊rks, Examples
woman at desktop looking at financial charts
Drawdown in Banking vs. Drawdown in Trading: What's the difference?
Cross Trade
What Is Delivered Ex Ship (DES), and How Is It Diffe⛦rent From DAT and DAP♌?
Slippage
Slippage: What It Means in Finance, With Examples
Close Position: Definition, How It Wo꧃🍸rks in Trading, and Example
An engineer stands on a rooftop of a highrise building as they look at a telecommunication tower and estimating the cost to replace it.
Sinking Fun🅠d Met🍎hod: Definition, How It Works, and Advantages
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Upside: Risk/Reward Definition and Examples
A stock trader on the floor of the stock exchange signaling a trade based on current stock prices.
Trade Signal
How to ꦍPick a Stock: Basic B🧜est Practices for New Investors
Notional Principal Amount: De🔯finition, Calculations, and Example
What Is Price Discovery? Defi🍒nition, Process, and vs. Valuation
Midsection Businessmen Analyzing Charts On Laptop In Office
An Introduction to Securities Market Structures
Break-Even Price: The amount of money an asset must be sold for to cover the costs of acquiring and owning it.
Break-Even Price: Definition, ꦕExamples, and How To Calcula🍸te It
The Myth of Profit/Loss Ratios
A businessman pointing a monitor with 3D charts and graphs.
Schaff Tr♎end Cycle Indicator: How it Co✃mpares to the MACD
Three business people sitting round a table discussing something on a laptop
Ex-Ante: What It Means and How It Works
Business man trader investor analyst using mobile phone app and laptop
What Are Speculators? ༒Definitio꧃n, Types, and Impact on the Market
A stock market chart and figures are a displayed on a screen facing the street.
Spot Price: Deꦗfinition🥃, Spot Price vs. Futures Price, Examples
Person holding a tablet in front of a desktop monitor displaying a chart, apple pen in hand
What Is a Tick in ꦯSecurities Trad⛎ing and How Does It Work?
Central Counterparty Clearing House (CCP): An organization that facilitates trading in European derivatives and equities markets.
What Is a Central Counterparty Clearing House (C🦩CP) in Tradi🌠ng?
A frustrated retail investor stares at a computer monitor and scratches their forehead as they wait for a trade order on a thinly traded stock to execute.
Thinly Traded: What it Means, How it Works, Risks
Coin stacks stepping down graph with red arrow and percent icon.
Big-Ticket Item: Term for Major Purchases
Person Looking at Monitor with Stock Trading Information
What Is Stock Trading?
Wirehouse: What They are, Role in Economy
 A financial professional loosk at his computer screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the end of the trading day
Alternative Trading System (🍷ATS) Definition and Regulation
A trader looks down at a tablet on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange
Arbitrageur: Definition, What They Do, Examples
An Accountant working on a calculator while sitting at a desk.
How Are the Interest Charges Calcula🌜te♉d on Margin Accounts?
Newspaper showing bond options prices.
Minimum Margin: What it is, How it Works, Example
Midsection Businessmen Analyzing Charts On Laptop In Office
Rogue Trader: What it is, How it Works, Examples
An empty box with a spring launching the word preview
Teaser Document: What it is, Content, Uses
a man holding a laptop in front of a skyline overlaid with a line graph and bid offer numbers
Institutional Traders vs. Retail Traders: What's the Difference?
A close-up of a hand pointing to a digital screen displaying a stock market candlestick chart
Pips vs. Points vs. Ticks: What's the Difference?
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Trading M🌸argin Excess: What it Means, How it Works, Dangers
Stock Exchange Market Display Screen
Stock Record: What it is and how it Works
Material Amount: What it Means, How it Works
Hypothesis T💎esting in Finance: ꩲConcept and Examples
Trading floor with traders working on it.
Introduction to Level II Quotes
A small business owner shakes hands with a banker after purchasing new commercial property while an escrow officer looks on and acts as a witness.
What Is a Third Party?🍌 How Their Role Works and Examples
Investor Analyzing Stock Market Investments With Financial Dashboard, Business Intelligence (BI), and Key Performance Indicators (KPI) on Smartphone and Computer Screens
What Short Interest Tells Us
First In, First Out
The FIFO Method: First In, First Out
Paper Currency Blowing out of Open Window
What Are the Primary Sources of Market Risk?
Trading Session: The primary trading hours for a given asset.
Trading Session: Find Out When Various Mar🦹kets Areꦗ Open
Matching Orders:💖 What They Are, How They Work, and Examplဣes