Take Profit, Slippage and More: Ultimate Guide on Orders and Execution

1.Take Profit, Slippage and More: Ultimate Guide on Orders and Execution
2.Types of Orders
3.Order Execution Mechanisms
4.Order Routing and Liquidity
5.Execution Models
6.Trade with Ultima Markets

Take Profit, Slippage and More: Ultimate Guide on Orders and Execution

In the world of trading, success doesn’t only depend on what you buy or sell—it often comes down to how you do it. This is where orders and execution play a crucial role.

Orders are instructions that traders send to their broker or trading platform to enter or exit the market. Execution is when the buy or sell order is fulfilled.

Why Understanding Orders and Execution Matters

Many traders lose money not because of bad analysis, but due to poor execution. For instance, using a market order in a fast-moving market can lead to buying at a significantly worse price—a phenomenon known as slippage. Similarly, failing to use stop-loss or take-profit orders exposes trades to unnecessary risk and emotional decision-making.

On the other hand, a well-planned order strategy allows you to:

  • Enter positions at desired price levels
  • Control your risk exposure automatically
  • Avoid emotional trading decisions
  • Improve your consistency and discipline

Understanding how brokers execute these orders—whether via a dealing desk, straight-through processing (STP), or an electronic communication network (ECN)—also affects your trading outcome. Different models can impact your execution speed, slippage, and transparency.

Types of Orders

In trading, different situations call for different types of orders. Understanding the strengths and limitations of each order type helps you enter and exit the market efficiently, minimise slippage, and manage risk.

The most common order types used across trading platforms offered by brokers are:

Market Order

A market order is an instruction to buy or sell an asset immediately at the best available price. This type of order is ideal only when speed is more important than price, such as during news releases or breakouts.

Market orders execute instantly, but can result in slippage, especially in volatile markets.

Example: You want to buy EUR/USD now at the current price, even if it’s slightly worse than expected.

Limit Order

A limit order sets the maximum price you’re willing to pay to buy, or the minimum you’re willing to accept to sell. This type of order is ideal when you want a better price and can wait.

Limit orders avoid buying high or selling low, but might not get filled if the market never reaches your limit.

Example: EUR/USD is at 1.0860. You place a buy limit at 1.0840, hoping it pulls back.

Stop Order

A stop order triggers a market order once a set price is hit. There are two types of stop orders: buy stop and sell stop.

  • Buy Stop: To buy above the current price (used in breakouts).
  • Sell Stop: To sell below the current price (used in breakdowns).

Stop orders help catch momentum trades, but can trigger slippage once activated.

Example: EUR/USD is at 1.0860. You place a buy stop at 1.0885 to catch a breakout.

Stop-Loss Order

A stop-loss order automatically closes a trade to prevent excessive losses. This type of order enforces discipline and risk management.

Example: If you bought EUR/USD at 1.0860, place a stop-loss at 1.0820 to limit your downside.

Take-Profit Order

A take-profit order closes a trade when the price reaches a desired profit level. This type of order locks in profits and removes emotions from exits.

Example: If you bought EUR/USD at 1.0860, place a take-profit at 1.0900.

Trailing Stop Order

A trailing stop moves with the market to protect profits while allowing trades to run. It “trails” the market at a fixed distance, and the stop is triggered if the market reverses. This order type is ideal for Trend-following strategies.

Example: If your trailing stop is 30 pips and EUR/USD moves up 50 pips, the stop moves up 20 pips from the entry.

Time-in-Force Orders: GTC vs Day Order

Time-in-force defines how long your order remains active. There are primarily two types of such orders:

  • GTC (Good ‘Til Cancelled): Remains open until filled or cancelled.
  • Day Order: Expires at the end of the trading day if not executed.

Some trading platforms and brokers may offer other order types as well. Traders must understand any order type extensively before using it.

Order Execution Mechanisms

Once you place an order, the way it’s processed—called execution—can significantly affect your trading outcome. It determines how quickly and at what price your order is filled. Even if you’ve chosen the right direction, poor execution can turn a winning trade into a losing one.

Market Execution vs Instant Execution

These are two primary execution methods used by brokers.

Market Execution: In market execution, the broker fills the order at the best available price in the market, not necessarily the one you see on the screen. This execution type is used by ECN/STP brokers.

Pros Cons
No requotes; more likely to be filled during volatility. You may experience slippage—buying or selling at a different price than expected.

Example: You click “buy” at 1.1000, but due to volatility, your trade is filled at 1.1004.

Instant Execution: In instant execution, the order is executed exactly at the price you requested—or not at all. This order type is used by dealing desk (market maker) brokers.

Pros Cons
Tighter control on price. High chance of requotes in fast-moving markets.

Example: You try to buy EUR/USD at 1.1000. If the price changes, your broker may reject the order and offer a requote.

Pending Orders

Pending orders are instructions to open a trade when the market reaches a certain price in the future. There are several types of pending orders:

  • Buy Limit: Below current market price.
  • Sell Limit: Above current market price.
  • Buy Stop: Above market price (momentum entry).
  • Sell Stop: Below market price (breakdown strategy).
  • Stop-Limit: Combines stop order trigger and limit pricing—used in volatile markets to avoid market order slippage.

Traders must use them for set-and-forget strategies, breakout trades, or entries in key support/resistance zones.

Partial Fills

An order is partially filled when only a part is filled at the expected price due to limited liquidity. It is common in large positions or illiquid markets. To avoid partial fills, traders should trade in smaller volumes or during peak hours.

Slippage

Slippage happens when an order gets filled at a worse (or occasionally better) price than requested. It happens due to high volatility, low liquidity, or latency.

To reduce slippage, traders must use limit orders instead of market orders, trade during high-liquidity sessions (e.g., London/New York overlap), and choose brokers with better execution tech (low latency, deep liquidity).

Execution quality is as important as your trading strategy. Fast and accurate execution ensures you get the price you expected—or as close as possible—while protecting you from slippage and missed opportunities.

Order Routing and Liquidity

Once you place a trade, your broker must route it to a liquidity provider or internalise, depending on the execution model.

Role of Liquidity Providers

Liquidity providers (LPs) are large financial institutions—banks, hedge funds, or prime brokers—that supply the bid and ask prices you see on your trading platform.

Liquidity providers quote buy/sell prices and fill orders, compete to offer the tightest spreads, and allow brokers to offer real-time pricing and fast execution.

Why liquidity matters:

  • Tight Spreads: More competition means better prices.
  • Depth: High liquidity allows larger trades without significant price impact.
  • Stability: Better fill rates, especially in volatile conditions.

Smart Order Routing (SOR)

Smart Order Routing is used by more advanced or institutional-grade platforms to find the best execution path across multiple venues.

This routing system scans multiple liquidity pools or exchanges simultaneously, routes orders to the venue offering the best price or fastest fill, and optimises execution by avoiding venues with poor liquidity or latency.

Why smart order routing matters:

  • Best Available Price: Finds better quotes across different venues.
  • Reduced Slippage: Matches orders with minimal price impact.
  • Customisable Logic: Institutions can prioritise speed, cost, or size.

Market Depth and Order Books

Market depth shows how much volume is available at each price level. It reflects true liquidity.

  • Shallow Depth: A few lots at each price; prone to slippage.
  • Deep Book: More volume at each level; stable fills even for large trades.

Some platforms display a Level 2 Order Book, showing:

  • Best bid and ask (Level 1)
  • Queued orders at various price levels (Level 2 and beyond)

Efficient order routing and access to deep liquidity reduce your costs and execution risk. It’s a hidden, but vital, part of every successful trading operation—especially for scalpers, high-frequency traders, and institutions.

Execution Models

Execution models describe how a broker processes and fills your orders. The type of execution model used can affect pricing, transparency, conflict of interest, and even how fast your trades are executed.

There are three main execution models: Dealing Desk (DD), No Dealing Desk (NDD), and Hybrid. Each model comes with its own set of advantages and trade-offs.

Dealing Desk (DD) / Market Maker Model

In this model, the broker acts as the counterparty to your trade. Your order does not go to the real market—it is filled internally.

How does dealing desk or market maker model works:

  • You buy, the broker sells; you sell, the broker buys.
  • The broker profits from your losses and loses when you win.
  • Spreads are fixed, and execution can be fast—but not always transparent.
Pros Cons
Fixed spreads (helpful during volatile markets). There are concerns of a conflict of interest as the broker might benefit from your losses.
Often better for beginners due to simplicity. Requotes and order rejections during fast-moving markets.
No slippage in calm markets.

If you place a market buy order for GBP/USD, the broker internally fills it and holds the risk on their own books.

No Dealing Desk (NDD) Models

No Dealing Desk (NDD) model brokers route your orders directly to external liquidity providers without internalising the trade. There are two types of such models: STP (Straight Through Processing) and ECN (Electronic Communication Network).

  • STP (Straight Through Processing): In this model, orders are passed through directly to LPs. The broker earns through markup on spreads or commission. There is also no conflict of interest, but slippage can occur.
  • ECN (Electronic Communication Network): An ECN broker connects you directly to a pool of traders, institutions, and banks. It also offers raw spreads and charges a separate commission. Traders can also see the depth of market (DOM) on ECN platforms.
Pros Cons
Transparent pricing. Variable spreads.
Lower spreads (especially ECN). Commissions (especially on ECN).
Minimal broker interference. May not suit small accounts due to higher cost per trade.

Hybrid Execution Models

Many brokers use a hybrid model—internalising small retail trades (DD) and routing larger ones (NDD). Brokers use hybrid models to manage risk exposure better, offer lower costs to clients by internalising smaller trades, and still give access to real market pricing when needed.

How to choose the right model?

Model Conflict of Interest Spreads Slippage Transparency
Dealing Desk (DD) High Fixed Low to Medium Low
STP Low Variable Medium Medium
ECN None Raw + Commission High High

Knowing your broker’s execution model helps you understand why your order was filled a certain way—and whether the pricing is truly fair.

In trading, precision isn’t a luxury—it’s a necessity. Whether you’re scalping currency pairs on MT5 or managing long-term positions in commodities, how you enter, manage, and exit your trades defines your results just as much as your analysis does.

Understanding the full range of order types, the way brokers execute your trades, and how to manage execution risks gives you a real edge. It moves you from being reactive to being in control—where rules, not emotion guide your trades.

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Glossary

Get started or expand your knowledge of trading at any level with a wealth of financial industry terms and definitions that you won’t find anywhere else.

Bookmarked Trading Term(s)

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  • AMM (Automated Money Market)

    A decentralized system that uses algorithms to automatically manage liquidity and trading in financial markets without traditional market makers.

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  • APR (Annual Percentage Rate)

    The yearly interest rate a trader pays on borrowed funds or e arns on investments, excluding compounding.

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  • APY (Annual Percentage Yield)

    The yearly interest rate a trader earns, including compounding, which reflects the real return on an investment.

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  • Asymmetric Cryptography

    A security method using two different keys (public and private) to encrypt and decrypt data, ensuring secure transactions.

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  • Asymmetric Encryption

    The apportionment of premiums and discounts on forward exchange transactions that relate directly to deposit swap (interest arbitrage) deals, over the period of each deal.

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  • Atomic Swap

    A direct peer-to-peer exchange of different cryptocurrencies without the need for intermediaries, reducing counterparty risk.

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  • Balance Of Trade

    The value of a country's exports minus its imports.

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  • Bar Chart

    A type of chart which consists of four significant points: the high and the low prices, which form the vertical bar; the opening price, which is marked with a horizontal line to the left of the bar; and the closing price, which is marked with a horizontal line to the right of the bar.

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  • Barrier Level

    A certain price of great importance included in the structure of a Barrier Option. If a Barrier Level price is reached, the terms of a specific Barrier Option call for a series of events to occur.

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  • Barrier Option

    Any number of different option structures (such as knock-in, knock-out, no touch, double-no-touch-DNT) that attaches great importance to a specific price trading. In a no-touch barrier, a large defined payout is awarded to the buyer of the option by the seller if the strike price is not 'touched' before expiry. This creates an incentive for the option seller to drive prices through the strike level and creates an incentive for the option buyer to defend the strike level.

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  • Base Currency

    The first currency in a currency pair. It shows how much the base currency is worth as measured against the second currency. For example, if the USD/CHF (U.S. Dollar/Swiss Franc) rate equals 1.6215, then one USD is worth CHF 1.6215. In the forex market, the US dollar is normally considered the base currency for quotes, meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair. The primary exceptions to this rule are the British pound, the euro and the Australian dollar.

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  • Cable

    The GBP/USD (Great British Pound/U.S. Dollar) pair. Cable earned its nickname because the rate was originally transmitted to the US via a transatlantic cable beginning in the mid 1800s when the GBP was the currency of international trade.

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  • Cad

    The Canadian dollar, also known as Loonie or Funds.

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  • Call Option

    A currency trade which exploits the interest rate difference between two countries. By selling a currency with a low rate of interest and buying a currency with a high rate of interest, the trader will receive the interest difference between the two countries while this trade is open.

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  • Canadian Ivey Purchasing Managers (Cipm) Index

    A monthly gauge of Canadian business sentiment issued by the Richard Ivey Business School.

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  • Candlestick Chart

    A chart that indicates the trading range for the day as well as the opening and closing price. If the open price is higher than the close price, the rectangle between the open and close price is shaded. If the close price is higher than the open price, that area of the chart is not shaded.

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  • Day Trader

    Speculators who take positions in commodities and then liquidate those positions prior to the close of the same trading day.

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  • Day Trading

    Making an open and close trade in the same product in one day.

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  • Deal

    A term that denotes a trade done at the current market price. It is a live trade as opposed to an order.

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  • Dealer

    An individual or firm that acts as a principal or counterpart to a transaction. Principals take one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread (profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party. In contrast, a broker is an individual or firm that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers for a fee or commission.

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  • Dealing Spread

    The difference between the buying and selling price of a contract.

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  • Ecb

    European Central Bank, the central bank for the countries using the euro.

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  • Economic Indicator

    A government-issued statistic that indicates current economic growth and stability. Common indicators include employment rates, Gross Domestic Product (GDP), inflation, retail sales, etc.

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  • End Of Day Order (eod)

    An order to buy or sell at a specified price that remains open until the end of the trading day.

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  • Est/Edt

    The time zone of New York City, which stands for United States Eastern Standard Time/Eastern Daylight time.

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  • Estx50

    A name for the Euronext 50 index.

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  • Factory Orders

    The dollar level of new orders for both durable and nondurable goods. This report is more in depth than the durable goods report which is released earlier in the month.

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  • Fed

    The Federal Reserve Bank, the central bank of the United States, or the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee), the policy-setting committee of the Federal Reserve.

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  • Fed Officials

    Refers to members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve or regional Federal Reserve Bank Presidents.

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  • Figure/The Figure

    Refers to the price quotation of '00' in a price such as 00-03 (1.2600-03) and would be read as 'figure-three.' If someone sells at 1.2600, traders would say 'the figure was given' or 'the figure was hit.

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  • Fill

    When an order has been fully executed.

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  • G7

    Group of 7 Nations - United States, Japan, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Italy and Canada.

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  • G8

    Group of 8 - G7 nations plus Russia.

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  • Gap Gapping

    A quick market move in which prices skip several levels without any trades occurring. Gaps usually follow economic data or news announcements.

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  • Gearing (Also Known As Leverage)

    Gearing refers to trading a notional value that is greater than the amount of capital a trader is required to hold in his or her trading account. It is expressed as a percentage or a fraction.

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  • Ger30

    An index of the top 30 companies (by market capitalization) listed on the German stock exchange – another name for the DAX.

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  • Handle

    Every 100 pips in the FX market starting with 000.

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  • Hawk/Hawkish

    A country's monetary policymakers are referred to as hawkish when they believe that higher interest rates are needed, usually to combat inflation or restrain rapid economic growth or both.

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  • Hedge

    A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.

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  • Hit The Bid

    To sell at the current market bid.

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  • Hk50/Hkhi

    Names for the Hong Kong Hang Seng index.

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  • Illiquid

    Little volume being traded in the market; a lack of liquidity often creates choppy market conditions. 

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  • Imm

    The IMM, or International Monetary Market, is a part of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) that deals with trading currency and interest rate futures and options.

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  • Imm Futures

    A traditional futures contract based on major currencies against the US dollar. IMM futures are traded on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

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  • Imm Session

    8:00am - 3:00pm New York.

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  • Indu

    Abbreviation for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

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  • Japanese Economy Watchers Survey

    Measures the mood of businesses that directly service consumers such as waiters, drivers and beauticians. Readings above 50 generally signal improvements in sentiment.

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  • Japanese Machine Tool Orders

    Measures the total value of new orders placed with machine tool manufacturers. Machine tool orders are a measure of the demand for companies that make machines, a leading indicator of future industrial production. Strong data generally signals that manufacturing is improving and that the economy is in an expansion phase.

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  • Jpn225

    A name for the NEKKEI index.

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  • Keep The Powder Dry

    To limit your trades due to inclement trading conditions. In either choppy or extremely narrow markets, it may be better to stay on the sidelines until a clear opportunity arises.

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  • Kiwi

    Nickname for NZD/USD (New Zealand Dollar/U.S. Dollar).

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  • Knock-Ins

    Option strategy that requires the underlying product to trade at a certain price before a previously bought option becomes active. Knock-ins are used to reduce premium costs of the underlying option and can trigger hedging activities once an option is activated.

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  • Knock-Outs

    Option that nullifies a previously bought option if the underlying product trades a certain level. When a knock-out level is traded, the underlying option ceases to exist and any hedging may have to be unwound.

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  • Last Dealing Day

    The last day you may trade a particular product.

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  • Last Dealing Time

    The last time you may trade a particular product.

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  • Leading Indicators

    Statistics that are considered to predict future economic activity.

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  • Level

    A price zone or particular price that is significant from a technical standpoint or based on reported orders/option interest.

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  • Leverage

    Also known as margin, this is the percentage or fractional increase you can trade from the amount of capital you have available. It allows traders to trade notional values far higher than the capital they have. For example, leverage of 100:1 means you can trade a notional value 100 times greater than the capital in your trading account.*

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  • Macro

    The longest-term trader who bases their trade decisions on fundamental analysis. A macro trade’s holding period can last anywhere from around six months to multiple years.

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  • Manufacturing Production

    Measures the total output of the manufacturing aspect of the Industrial Production figures. This data only measures the 13 sub-sectors that relate directly to manufacturing. Manufacturing makes up approximately 80% of total Industrial Production.

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  • Market Call

    A request from a broker or dealer for additional funds or other collateral on a position that has moved against the customer.

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  • Market Maker

    A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial product.

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  • Market Order

    An order to buy or sell at the current price.

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  • Nas100

    An abbreviation for the NASDAQ 100 index.

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  • Net Position

    The amount of currency bought or sold which has not yet been offset by opposite transactions.

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  • New York Session

    8:00am – 5:00pm (New York time).

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  • No Touch

    An option that pays a fixed amount to the holder if the market never touches the predetermined Barrier Level.

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  • Nya.X

    Symbol for NYSE Composite index.

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  • Offer (Also Known As The Ask Price)

    The price at which the market is prepared to sell a product. Prices are quoted two-way as Bid/Offer. The Offer price is also known as the Ask. The Ask represents the price at which a trader can buy the base currency, which is shown to the right in a currency pair. For example, in the quote USD/CHF 1.4527/32, the base currency is USD, and the ask price is 1.4532, meaning you can buy one US dollar for 1.4532 Swiss francs. 

    In CFD trading, the Ask represents the price a trader can buy the product. For example, in the quote for UK OIL 111.13/111.16, the product quoted is UK OIL and the ask price is £111.16 for one unit of the underlying market.

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  • Offered

    If a market is said to be trading offered, it means a pair is attracting heavy selling interest, or offers.

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  • Offsetting Transaction

    A trade that cancels or offsets some or all of the market risk of an open position.

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  • On Top

    Attempting to sell at the current market order price.

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  • One Cancels The Other Order (oco)

    A designation for two orders whereby if one part of the two orders is executed, then the other is automatically cancelled.

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  • Paid

    Refers to the offer side of the market dealing.

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  • Pair

    The forex quoting convention of matching one currency against the other.

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  • Paneled

    A very heavy round of selling.

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  • Parabolic

    A market that moves a great distance in a very short period of time, frequently moving in an accelerating fashion that resembles one half of a parabola. Parabolic moves can be either up or down.

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  • Partial Fill

    When only part of an order has been executed.

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  • Quantitative Easing

    When a central bank injects money into an economy with the aim of stimulating growth.

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  • Quarterly Cfds

    When a central bank injects money into an economy with the aim of stimulating growth.

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  • Quote

    An indicative market price, normally used for information purposes only.

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  • Rally

    A recovery in price after a period of decline.

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  • Range

    When a price is trading between a defined high and low, moving within these two boundaries without breaking out from them.

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  • Rate

    The price of one currency in terms of another, typically used for dealing purposes.

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  • Rba

    Reserve Bank of Australia, the central bank of Australia.

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  • Rbnz

    Reserve Bank of New Zealand, the central bank of New Zealand.

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  • Sec

    The Securities and Exchange Commission.

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  • Sector

    A group of securities that operate in a similar industry.

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  • Sell

    Taking a short position in expectation that the market is going to go down.

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  • Settlement

    The process by which a trade is entered into the books, recording the counterparts to a transaction. The settlement of currency trades may or may not involve the actual physical exchange of one currency for another.

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  • Shga.X

    Symbol for the Shanghai A index

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  • Takeover

    Assuming control of a company by buying its stock.

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  • Technical Analysis

    The process by which charts of past price patterns are studied for clues as to the direction of future price movements.

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  • Technicians/techs

    Traders who base their trading decisions on technical or charts analysis.

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  • Ten (10) Yr

    US government-issued debt which is repayable in ten years. For example, a US 10-year note.

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  • Thin

    A illiquid, slippery or choppy market environment. A light-volume market that produces erratic trading conditions.

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  • Ugly

    Describing unforgiving market conditions that can be violent and quick.

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  • Uk Average Earnings Including Bonus/ Excluding Bonus

    Measures the average wage including/excluding bonuses paid to employees. This is measured quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) from the previous year.

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  • Uk Claimant Count Rate

    Measures the number of people claiming unemployment benefits. The claimant count figures tend to be lower than the unemployment data since not all of the unemployed are eligible for benefits.

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  • Uk Hbos House Price Index

    Measures the relative level of UK house prices for an indication of trends in the UK real estate sector and their implication for the overall economic outlook. This index is the longest monthly data series of any UK housing index, published by the largest UK mortgage lender (Halifax Building Society/Bank of Scotland).

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  • Uk Jobless Claims Change

    Measures the change in the number of people claiming unemployment benefits over the previous month.

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  • Value Date

    Also known as the maturity date, it is the date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e., exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward.

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  • Variation Margin

    Funds traders must hold in their accounts to have the required margin necessary to cope with market fluctuations.

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  • Vix Or Volatility Index

    Shows the market's expectation of 30-day volatility. It is constructed using the implied volatilities of a wide range of S&P 500 index options. The VIX is a widely used measure of market risk and is often referred to as the "investor fear gauge."

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  • Volatility

    Referring to active markets that often present trade opportunities.

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  • Wedge Chart Pattern

    Chart formation that shows a narrowing price range over time, where price highs in an ascending wedge decrease incrementally, or in a descending wedge, price declines are incrementally smaller. Ascending wedges typically conclude with a downside breakout and descending wedges typically terminate with upside breakouts.

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  • Whipsaw

    Slang for a highly volatile market where a sharp price movement is quickly followed by a sharp reversal.

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  • Wholesale Price

    Measures the changes in prices paid by retailers for finished goods. Inflationary pressures typically show earlier than the headline retail.

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  • Working Order

    Where a limit order has been requested but not yet filled.

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  • Wsj

    Acronym for The Wall Street Journal.

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  • Xag/Usd

    Symbol for Silver Index.

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  • Xau/Usd

    Symbol for Gold Index.

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  • Xax.X

    Symbol for AMEX Composite Index.

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  • YER

    Yemeni Rial. The currency of Yemen. It is subdivided into 100 fils.

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  • Yemeni Rial

    See YER.

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  • Yen

    See JPY.

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  • Yield

    Yield is the return on an investment and is usually expressed as a percentage.

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  • Yuan Renminbi

    See CNY

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  • ZAR

    Rand. The currency of South Africa. It is subdivided into 100 cents.

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  • ZMW

    Zambian Kwacha. The currency of Zambia. It is subdivided into 100 Ngwee.

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  • ZWL

    Zimbabwe Dollar. The currency of Zimbabwe. It is subdivided into 100 cents.

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  • Zambian Kwacha

    See ZMW.

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  • ZigZag

    A technical indicator that draws tops and bottoms - filtering out noise.

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  • Zimbabwe Dollar

    See ZWL.

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    Bookmarked Trading Term(s)

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