Traders Glossary
D
DAY TRADER
Speculators who take positions in commodities and then liquidate those positions prior to the close of the same trading day.
DEAL
A term that denotes a trade done at the current market price. It is a live trade as opposed to an order.
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.
DEFEND A LEVEL
Action taken by a trader, or group of traders, to prevent a product from trading at a certain price or price zone, usually because they hold a vested interest in doing so, such as a barrier option.
DELTA
The ratio between the change in price of a product and the change in price of its underlying market.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT (DCLG) UK HOUSE PRICES
A monthly survey produced by the DCLG that uses a very large sample of all completed house sales to measure the price trends in the UK real estate market.
DEPOSIT RATE
A composite of tradable rates for lending and borrowing a currency over a specific time period (tenor), quoted as a yearly rate. The best bid and offer are taken to present a competitive picture of the cost of borrowing. When a deposit rate is used for financing, the 1-month rate will typically be used for consistency.
DERIVATIVE
A financial contract whose value is based on the value of an underlying asset. Some of the most common underlying assets for derivative contracts are indices, equities, commodities, and currencies.
DEVALUATION
When a pegged currency is allowed to weaken or depreciate based on official actions; the opposite of a revaluation.
DISCOUNT RATE
Interest rate that an eligible depository institution is charged to borrow short-term funds directly from the Federal Reserve Bank.
DIVERGENCE
In technical analysis, a situation where price and momentum move in opposite directions, such as prices rising while momentum is falling. Divergence is considered either positive (bullish) or negative (bearish); both kinds of divergence signal major shifts in price direction. Positive/bullish divergence occurs when the price of a security makes a new low while the momentum indicator starts to climb upward. Negative/bearish divergence happens when the price of the security makes a new high, but the indicator fails to do the same and instead moves lower. Divergences frequently occur in extended price moves and frequently resolve with the price reversing direction to follow the momentum indicator.
DIVERGENCE OF MAS
A technical observation that describes moving averages of different periods moving away from each other, which generally forecasts a price trend.
DIVIDEND
The amount of a company’s earning distributed to its shareholders – usually described as a value per share.