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ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE The person
who deals with customers and their orders in commission house
offices.
ACTUALS The physical or cash
commodity, as distinguished from commodity futures contracts.
ARBITRAGE The simultaneous
purchase of one commodity against the sale of another in order to
profit from distortions in usual price relationships.
AT THE MARKET Orders which are
intended to be executed immediately by the floor broker at the
best obtainable price.
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BASIS Point difference over or
under a designated future at which a cash commodity of a certain
description is sold or quoted. A most important term for those who
hedge.
BEAR MARKET A market
characterized by falling prices.
BID An offer to buy a specific
quantity of a commodity that is subject to immediate acceptance.
BROKER A person paid a fee or
commission for acting as a agent in making contracts or sales.
BULL MARKET A market
characterized by rising prices.
BUOYANT Describes a market in
which prices have a tendency to rise easily with a considerable
show of strength.
BUYING HEDGE A hedge that is
initiated by taking a long position in the futures market equal to
the amount of the cash commodity which eventually needed.
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CARRYING CHARGE The cost to
store and insure a physical commodity.
CFTC The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.
CHART Futures prices plotted in a
way that the chartist believes gives insight into futures price
movements. Several futures markets are regularly influenced by
buying or selling based on traders price chart indications.
CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE (CBOT) The
worlds largest futures exchange, it was founded in 1848.
CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE (CME)
The worlds largest livestock exchange, it traces its origins to a
group of agricultural dealers who formed the Chicago Produce
Exchange in 1874. It was given its present name in 1919.
CLOSE A period of time at the end
of the trading session when all orders are filled within the
closing range.
CLOSING RANGE A range of closely
related prices in which transactions take place at the closing of
the market; buying and selling orders at the closing might have
been filled at any point within such a range.
CONTRACT In futures markets, a
standardized traded instrument that specifies the quantity and
quality of a commodity (or financial asset) for delivery (or cash
settlement) at a specified future date.
COVER To buy futures contracts in
order to offset previous selling.
CRUSH The process of reducing the
raw, unusable soybean into its two major components, oil and meal.
CRUSH SPREAD A futures spreading
position in which a trader attempts to profit from what he
believes to be discrepancies in the price relationship between
soybeans and their two derivative products.
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DAY ORDER An order that expires
on the close of trading if not filled during that day.
DAY TRADING A purchase and a sale
of the same futures during the trading hours of a single day.
DELIVERY NOTICE A notice of a
clearing members intentions to deliver a stated quantity of a
commodity in settlement of a futures contract.
DISCRETIONARY ACCOUNT - An account
in which the customer authorizes another person to make full
trading decisions.
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FILL OR KILL An order that must
be filled immediately or canceled.
FIRST NOTICE DAY (FND) The first
day on which notice of intentions to deliver actual commodities
against futures contracts can be made.
FLOOR BROKER A member who
executes orders for the accounts of other members on the trading
floor.
FLOOR TRADER An exchange member
who fills orders for his own account by being personally on the
floor. Normally called a "local."
FUTURES COMMISSION MERCHANT (FCM)
An intermediary who stands between the brokers in the pits and the
nonmember speculating and hedging public. Every brokerage house
must be a futures commission merchant in order to do business with
the public.
FUTURES CONTRACT A firm
commitment to make or accept delivery of a specified quantity and
quality of a commodity during a specific month in the future at a
price agreed upon at the time the commitment was made.
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GOOD TILL CANCELED ORDER (GTC)
An open order that remains in force until the customer explicitly
cancels the order, until the futures contract expires, or until
the order is filled.
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HEDGE To use the futures market
to reduce the price risks inherent in buying and selling cash
commodities. For example, as an elevator operator buys cash grain
from farmers, he can hedge his purchases by selling futures
contracts; when he sells the cash commodity, he purchases an
offsetting number of futures contracts to liquidate his position.
HEDGING The sale of futures
contracts in anticipation of future sales of cash commodities as a
protection against possible price declines, or the purchase of
futures contracts in anticipation of future purchases of cash
commodities as a protection against the possibility of increasing
costs.
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INTERMARKET SPREAD A spread
between commodities that are traded on more than one market. For
example, a typical intermarket spread might be made between
Chicago wheat and Kansas City wheat.
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LAST TRADING DAY (LTD) The
final day in which trading may occur for a particular delivery
month. After the last trading day, any remaining commitment must
be settled for delivery.
LIMIT ORDER An order in which the
trader sets a limit to the price, as contrasted with a market
order on which no limit is set.
LIQUIDATION The closing out of a
previous position by taking an opposite position in the same
contract.
LIQUIDITY The degree to which a
given market is liquid.
LONG A position established by
owning the actual commodity unhedged or by purchasing futures.
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MARGIN A good faith deposit a
speculator gives to his broker prior to initiating his first
trade.
MARGIN CALL A demand by a broker
for additional funds sufficient to raise your deposit on a
commodity futures contract above the minimum acceptable level.
MARKET IF TOUCHED (MIT) An order
that may be executed only if the market reaches a specified point.
(NOTE: Not all exchanges accept MIT orders.)
MARKET ORDER An order that is to
be filled as soon as possible at the best possible price.
MOVING AVERAGE A method of
smoothing prices to more easily discern market trends.
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NEW YORK MERCANTILE EXCHANGE (NYMEX)
Founded in 1872 as a market for cheese, butter, eggs, its
principle commodities today include heating oil and petroleum
products.
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OFFER An indication of a
willingness to sell at a certain price, as opposed to a bid.
OPEN INTEREST The total number of
futures contracts entered into during a specified period of time
that have not been liquidated either by offsetting futures
transactions or by actual delivery.
OPENING RANGE Range of closely
related prices at which transactions took place at the opening of
the market; buying and selling orders at the opening might be
filled at any point within such a range.
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PIT The area on an exchange
floor where futures trading takes place.
PRICE LIMIT The maximum price
advance or decline from the previous days settlement price
permitted for a commodity in one trading session by the rules of
the exchange.
PYRAMIDING The practice of using
accrued paper profits to margin additional trades.
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RALLY Quick advance in prices
following a decline.
RANGE The difference between the
highest and lowest prices recorded during a given trading session,
week, month, or year.
RISK CAPITAL Money which, if
lost, would not materially affect ones living habits or deny one
the necessities and comforts of normal life.
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SELLING HEDGE Selling futures
contracts to protect against possible decreased prices of
commodities which will be sold in the future.
SETTLEMENT PRICE The price at
which the clearing house clears all transactions at the close of
the day.
SHAKEOUT A healthy technical
correction of an overbought situation, characterized by a
comparatively short but sharp decline in prices.
SHORT A trader who has sold
futures, speculating that prices will decline.
SHORT SQUEEZE A situation in
which futures traders are unable to buy the cash commodity to
deliver against their positions, and so are forced to buy
offsetting futures at prices much higher than theyd ordinarily be
willing to pay.
SPECULATION Buying or selling in
hopes of making a profit.
SPECULATOR One who is interested
in profiting from a price change in a commodity futures contract.
Speculators may trade from the floor of an exchange if they are
members, or through a broker if they are not.
SPOT DELIVERY MONTH The nearest
delivery month among all those traded at any point in time. The
actual contract month represented by the spot delivery month is
constantly changing throughout the calendar year as each contract
month reaches its last trading day.
SPOT PRICE The price quoted for
the actual commodity same; same as cash commodity price.
SPREAD The purchase of one
futures contract and sale of another, in the expectation that the
price relationships between the two will change so that a
subsequent offsetting sale and purchase will yield a net profit.
STOP ORDER A buy order placed
above the market (or sell order placed below the market) that
becomes a market order when the specified price is reached.
SUPPORT Any barrier to a price
decline.
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TOPPING OUT A term employed to
denote loss of upside energy at the top after a long price run-up.
TRADING RANGE The amount that
futures prices can fluctuate during one trading
sessionessentially, the price "distance" between limit up and
limit down.
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VOLUME The number of purchases
and sales of a commodity made during a specified period of time.
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WHIPSAW term used to describe
what has happened to traders that have had stop orders executed as
a result of volatile market swings. The traders' intentions were
for the stop orders to be executed on market movements indicative
of a sustained trend.
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This information is obtained from
sources believed to be reliable. However, InvestorsDepot.com cannot guarantee its completeness or accuracy.
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