Forex Terms & Definitions

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Margin Call vs. Stop-Out Level

  • Margin Call: A broker’s warning that your account balance has fallen below the required margin percentage. You must deposit more funds or close positions to avoid liquidation.
  • Stop-Out Level: If no action is taken, the system automatically closes losing trades, starting with the least profitable, to meet margin requirements.

Example for UnitedPips Standard Account:
Margin Call Level: 60% (Warning issued)
Stop-Out Level: 30% (Auto-close of trades begins)


Forward Deal

A contract to buy or sell currency at a fixed future date and exchange rate. Used to hedge against exchange rate fluctuations.


Trailing Stop

A dynamic stop-loss order that adjusts upward as the market moves in your favor, locking in profits while protecting against losses.


Ask and Bid Price

  • Bid Price: Highest price a buyer is willing to pay for a currency pair.
  • Ask Price: Lowest price a seller is willing to accept.
  • The bid price is always lower than the ask price.

Bullish & Bearish Markets

  • Bullish: Prices are rising (buying pressure).
  • Bearish: Prices are falling (selling pressure).

Currency Pair

Forex trades involve currency pairs, with:
Base Currency: First currency in the pair.
Quote Currency: Second currency in the pair, showing how much is needed to buy one unit of the base currency.

Example: GBP/JPY = 150.50 (1 British pound = 150.50 Japanese yen).


Leverage

Leverage allows traders to control larger positions with a small deposit.
✔ Example: 1:100 leverage – A $100 deposit controls $10,000 in currency.
Higher leverage = higher profit potential & risk.


Lot Sizes in Forex

Standard Lot: 100,000 units
Mini Lot: 10,000 units
Micro Lot: 1,000 units
Nano Lot: 100 units


Order Types

Market Order: Executes immediately at the current market price.
Pending Orders: Execute only when price reaches a predetermined level.

Types of Pending Orders

Buy Limit: Buy when the price drops to a set level.
Buy Stop: Buy when the price rises to a set level.
Sell Limit: Sell when the price rises to a set level.
Sell Stop: Sell when the price drops to a set level.

Other Order Types

Take Profit: Closes a position at a target profit level.
Stop Loss: Closes a position to limit losses.


Pip (Percentage in Point)

A pip is the smallest price movement in forex, typically 0.0001 for most currencies (except JPY, where it’s 0.01).

✔ Example: EUR/USD moves from 1.3000 to 1.3010 = 10 pips.

Pip Value Calculation for 1 Standard Lot (100,000 units):
USD/JPY: 112.40: (0.01 / 112.40) × 100,000 = $8.89 per pip
EUR/USD: 1.1290: (0.0001 / 1.1290) × 100,000 = $8.85 per pip


Long vs. Short Positions

Long Position: Buying an asset expecting its price to rise (also called “Buy”).
Short Position: Selling an asset expecting its price to fall (also called “Sell” or “Short”).

Traders profit by going long in bullish markets and short in bearish markets.

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Forex Terms & Definitions

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