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Expertise: Email FreeStockTrades@hotmail.com for a free Scottrade Reference code/referral code/referral number. Fund your account with a minimum of $500, and you will get 3 free trades! You must save your referral code to get the free trades. Scottrade has 205 Branches Nationwide, and is rated highest in customer satisfaction for online investing 4 years in a row. The Discount Brokerage with the caring touch! Have a great day! Trade Mutual Funds [Free], Penny Stocks, Penny Stock, Options, etc. Brown Co, Schwab, Lynch, Rushtrade, Peter Leeds, Peterleeds, JP Morgan, Chase Manhattan, Lowtrades, Low Trades, Esignal, E signal, Stock Technical Analysis/Stocks, Fibonacci analysis, channeling, channels, Moving average, Bid, Ask, Spread, Daytrade, Day Trade, Daytrading, Day Trading, Swingtrade, Swing trade, Swingtrading, Swing trading, referal, Good


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Saturday, March 20, 2004



Email FreeStockTrades@hotmail.com for a free Scottrade Reference
code/referral code/referral number. Fund your account with a minimum
of $500, and you will get 3 free trades! You must save your referral
code to get the free trades. Scottrade has 205 Branches Nationwide,
and is rated highest in customer satisfaction for online investing 4
years in a row. The Discount Brokerage with the caring touch! Have a
great day!

Trade Mutual Funds [Free], Penny Stocks, Penny Stock,
Options, etc. Brown Co, Schwab, Lynch, Rushtrade, Peter Leeds,
Peterleeds, JP Morgan, Chase Manhattan, Lowtrades, Low Trades,
Esignal, E signal, Stock Technical Analysis/Stocks, Fibonacci
analysis, channeling, channels, Moving average, Bid, Ask, Spread,
Daytrade, Day Trade, Daytrading, Day Trading, Swingtrade, Swing
trade, Swingtrading, Swing trading, referal, Good

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Email FreeStockTrades@hotmail.com for a free Scottrade Reference
code/referral code/referral number. Fund your account with a minimum
of $500, and you will get 3 free trades! You must save your referral
code to get the free trades. Scottrade has 205 Branches Nationwide,
and is rated highest in customer satisfaction for online investing 4
years in a row. The Discount Brokerage with the caring touch! Have a
great day!

Trade Mutual Funds [Free], Penny Stocks, Penny Stock,
Options, etc. Brown Co, Schwab, Lynch, Rushtrade, Peter Leeds,
Peterleeds, JP Morgan, Chase Manhattan, Lowtrades, Low Trades,
Esignal, E signal, Stock Technical Analysis/Stocks, Fibonacci
analysis, channeling, channels, Moving average, Bid, Ask, Spread,
Daytrade, Day Trade, Daytrading, Day Trading, Swingtrade, Swing
trade, Swingtrading, Swing trading, referal, Good





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A Priori
Known ahead of time.


Abandoned Baby Pattern
A rare candlestick pattern in which an upside gap doji star (where
the shadows do not touch) is followed by a downside gap black
candlestick where the shadows also do not touch; considered a major
top reversal signal.


ABC

Elliott wave terminology for a three-wave countertrend price
movement. Wave A is the first price wave against the trend of the
market. Wave B is a corrective wave to Wave A. Wave C is the final
price move to complete the countertrend price move. Elliott wave
followers study A and C waves for price ratios based on numbers from
the Fibonacci series.


Accumulation
An addition to a trader's original market position. The first of
three distinct phases in a major trend in which investors are buying.


Accumulation/Distribution Line
See Chaikin Oscillator.


Actuals
Refers to actual physical commodities, as distinguished from futures.


ADA
Block-structured programming language developed under the guidance of
the U.S. Department of Defense to provide a medium for writing real-
time, concurrent applications, for facilitating program verification.


Adaptive Filter
Smoothing and/or forecasting prices with continuously updated
weighting of past prices.


Advance-Decline Line
Each day's number of declining issues is subtracted from the number
of advancing issues. The net difference is added to a running sum if
the difference is positive or subtracted from the running sum if the
difference is negative.


Adverse Excursion
The loss attributable to price movement against the position in any
one trade.


AKA
An acronym for "automated knowledge acquisition." Refers to the use
of programs to create knowledge needed by other programs (usually
expert systems).


Alpha
Premium that an investment portfolio earns above a given point of
reference; a measure of stock performance independent of the market.


American Depository Receipts (ADRs)
Certificates that are issued by a bank of US origin and traded in the
U.S. as domestic shares. The certificates represent the foreign
securities that the bank holds in that security's country of origin.


Amortization
Accounting method in which an asset's cost is spread out.


Analysis of Variance
(Anova) The partitioning of total sum of squares into the sum of
squares explained by the model and the remaining sum of squares
unexplained.


Anaume
Candlestick formation. An exceptional exhaustion pattern
(meaning "gap filling") composed of five candles. The anaume occurs
when the gap is filled in after a market price has changed
directions. This pattern coupled with the other patterns indicate a
strong potential for a bullish reversal and price advance.


Anchoring-and-Adjustment
Behavioral finance. The tendency to evaluate current decisions in the
context of past events.


Andrews Method

A technique whereby a technician will pick an extreme low or high to
use as a pivot point and draw a line, called the median line, from
this point that bisects a line drawn through the next corrective
phase that occurs after the pivot point. Lines parallel to the median
line are drawn through the high and low points of the corrective
phase. The parallel lines define the resistance and support levels
for the price channel.


Annealing (Simulated)
Generally a metallurgical process, in artificial intelligence a
process in which a neural net work searches for a set of weights to
minimize errors; the search constantly shrinks as the weights find
better values, analogous to the rearrangement of the molecules in a
heated metal bar as the bar cools.


Annual Earnings Change
(%) The historical earnings change between the most recently reported
fiscal year earn ings and the preceding.


Annual Net Profit Margin
(%) The percentage that the company earned from gross sales for the
most recently reported fiscal year.


Annual Sales Change
(%) The percentage change in sales between the most recently reported
fiscal year and the preceding.


Annualized
Translating the figures for a given year into an annual rate.


Antithetic Forecasts
Two forecasts whose errors are negatively correlated.


Arbitrage
The simultaneous purchase and sale of two different, but closely
related, securities to take advantage of a disparity in their prices.


ARIMA
See AutoRegressive Integrated Moving Average


ARMAX (AutoRegressive Moving Average eXogenous variables model)
The combination of fundamental variables outside the particular
market that correlates with the independent variable added with the
ARMA modeling of the remaining residuals.


Arms Index
Also known as TRading INdex (TRIN):
An advance/decline stock market indicator. A reading of less than 1.0
indicates bullish demand, while greater than 1.0 is bearish. The
index is often smoothed with a simple moving average.


Artificial Intelligence
The field of computer science dedicated to producing programs that
attempt to mimic the processes of the human brain.


Assign
To transfer to another to whom property is assigned.


Astrophysical Cycle
Any earthly cycle, such as a market cycle, that has been
scientifically related to the physics of the planetary system.


At-the-Money
An option whose strike price is nearest the current price of the
underlying deliverable.


Attenuation
The fractional part of reduced energy or lost power due to smoothing
or filtering.


Autocorrelation
The correlation between the values of a time series and previous
values of the same time series.


AutoRegressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA)
A linear stochastic model forecasting methodology described by Box
and Jenkins in their book Time Series Analysis, Forecasting and
Control.


Autoregressive
Using previous data to predict future data.


Average Directional Movement Index (ADX)
Indicator developed by J. Welles Wilder to measure market trend
intensity.


Average True Range
A moving average of the true range.


%b
Indicates where the closing price is within Bollinger bands:



Back Month
The out, or back, contract month, as opposed to the current contract
month; the expiration month farther in the future than the current,
or spot, month.


Back-Propagation Network
A feedforward multilayered neural network that is a commonly used
neural network paradigm.


Back-Testing
A strategy is tested or optimized on historical data and then the
strategy is applied to new data to see if the results are consistent.


Balanced Mutual Fund
A mutual fund that seeks a return that is a combination of capital
appreciation and current income, generally by building a portfolio of
bonds, preferred stocks and common stocks.


Bandpass Filter
An oscillator that accentuates only the frequencies in an
intermediate range and rejects high and low frequencies. Implemented
by first applying a low pass filter to the data and then a high pass
filter to the resulting data (e.g., two SMA crossover system).


Bank Investment Contracts (BICs)
A negotiated-term deposit issued by a commercial bank. See Guaranteed
Investment Contracts (GICs).


Bar Chart
Used to plot price movements using vertical bars indicating price
ranges.


Basis
The difference between spot (cash) prices and the futures contract
price.


Basis Points
The measure of yields on bonds and notes; one basis point equals
0.01% of yield.


Basket Trades
Large transactions made up of a number of different stocks.


Bayes Decision Rule
A rule that states the strategy chosen from those available is that
for which the expected value of payoff is the greatest.


Bear Market
A securities market characterized thus based on declining prices.


Beta
A regression of the estimated coefficient that belongs to a
particular variable.


Beta (Coefficient)
A measure of the market/nondiversifiable risk associated with any
given security in the market. A ratio of an individual's stock
historical returns to the historical returns of the stock market. If
a stock increased in value by 12% while the market increased by 10%,
the stock's beta would be 1.2.


Bias
The difference between the expected value of an estimator and the
actual value to be estimated.


Bid and Ask
Highest price and lowest price that an investor will pay for a
tradable.


Bimodal Distribution
In which observations are displayed as having two distinct peaks.


Black Box
A proprietary, computerized trading system whose rules are not
disclosed or readily accessible.


Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model
A model developed to estimate the market value of option contracts.


Block Trades
Large transactions of a particular stock sold as a unit.


Blow-Off Top
A steep and rapid increase in price followed by a steep and rapid
drop in price.


Bonds
A long-term debt security with a stated interest rate and fixed due
dates, issued by a corporation or a government, when interest and
principal must be paid. There are many variations.


Boolean
Describes a variable that may have one of only two possible values:
true or false. After George Boole, English logician, credited with
the invention of "Boolean logic."


Box-Jenkins Linear Least Squares
The additive structure of Box-Jenkins models with a polynomial
structure.


Box-Jenkins Method
From G.E.P. Box and G.M. Jenkins, who authored Time Series Analysis:
Forecasting and Control. The method refers to the use of
autoregressive integrated moving averages (ARIMA), which fit seasonal
mod els and nonseasonal models to a time series.


Box-Jenkins Nonlinear Least Squares
The multiplicative structure of Box-Jenkins models using the Gauss-
Newton algorithm with numerical derivatives.


Bozu
Literally "bald" or "monk" in Japanese; in candlestick terminology
refers to a situation during which a trading cycle opens or closes on
a high or low, indicating a victory for the bulls or the bears.


Bracketing
A trading range market or a price region that is non-trending.


Breakaway Gap

When a tradable exits a trading range by trading at price levels that
leaves a price area where no trading occurs on a bar chart.
Typically, these gaps appear at the completion of important chart
formations.


Breakout

The point when the market price moves out of the trend channel.


Broker-dealer
A firm that handles transactions for its customers and also purchases
securities for its own account, selling them to customers.


Broker's Deck
Orders physically held by the floor broker in the trading pit.


Bull Market
A securities market characterized thus on rising prices.


Buy and Hold
The acquisition of a tradable for the long term rather than quick
turnover.


C Language
Widely used systems development language, also block-structured, but
with more facilities to control the machine at the level of the
hardware.


Call Option
A contract that gives the buyer of the option the right but not the
obligation to take delivery of the underlying security at a specific
price within a certain time.


Calmar Ratio
Takes the average rate of return for the last 36 months and divides
it by the maximum drawdown for the same period. It is usually
calculated on a monthly basis. A negative value for the Calmar ratio
means that the system or trader had a negative performance over the
last three years.


Candlestick Charts

A charting method, originally from Japan, in which the high and low
are plotted as a single line and are referred to as shadows. The
price range between the open and the close is plotted as a narrow
rectangle and is referred to as the body. If the close is above the
open, the body is white. If the close is below the open, the body is
black.


Capital Gains Distribution
A distribution to investment company shareholders from net long-term
capital gains realized by a regulated investment company on the sale
of portfolio securities.


Capital Losses
Losses resulting from selling at a loss.


CBOT
Chicago Board of Trade.


Central Limit Theorem
From statistics, the theorem that the distribution of sample means
taken from a large population approaches a normal, Gaussian, curve.


Chaikin Oscillator
An oscillator created by subtracting a 10-day EMA from a three-day
EMA of the accumulation /distribution line.


Channel
In charting, a price channel contains prices throughout a trend.
There are three basic ways to draw channels: parallel, rounded and
channels that connect lows (bear trend) or highs (bull trend).


Chaos Theory
Describes the behavior of nonlinear systems. A subset of nonlinear
dynamics analysis, chaos theory is a branch of mathematics focusing
on irregular and complex behavior that has an underlying order. In
the stock market, chaos theory seeks to forecast the future path of
stock prices, including sudden changes that occur during periods of
intense market activity.


Charts
A display or picture of a security that plots price and/or volume
(the number of shares sold). The chart is the foundation of technical
analysis, and over the years, many different types of charts have
been developed.


Chi Square
A statistical test to determine if the patterns exhibited by data
could have been produced by chance. The chi-square test with Yates's
correction using two-way statistics for decline vs. advance is:
where:
oj = actual observed frequency of test
ej = expected or theoretical frequency of test.


Christmas Tree Spread
The simultaneous purchase and writing of options with either a
different strike price or expi ration date or combination of the two.


Classifier Systems
In artificial intelligence, these systems perform a type of machine
learning that generates rules from examples.


Clone Fund
A smaller version of a retail mutual fund, it is offered as a
subaccount in a variable annuity. The daily price of a clone fund is
different among variable annuities that carry it because each clone
fund starts on a different date and with a base price of $10.


Closed-End Funds
A mutual fund that does not sell unlimited shares; one with a
specific number of outstanding shares.


Closed Trades
Positions that have been either liquidated or offset.


Clustering
Locating the presence of groups of vectors that are similar in some
fashion.


CME
The Chicago Mercantile Exchange.


Coefficient
A constant used to multiply another quantity or series; as in 3 xand
ax, 3 and a are coefficients ofx.


Coefficient of Determination
R-squared. The proportion of the variation in the data explained by
the model.


Coincidence
In Gann theory, a projected reversal point.


Colinear
see Multicolinearity.


Combined Forecast
The weighted average of two or more forecasts.


Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
A commission that oversees the commodity exchanges in the US.


Comparative Relative Strength
Compares the price movement of a stock with that of its competitors,
industry group or the entire market. This is distinct from J. Welles
Wilder's Relative Strength Index, which compares current price
movement to previous price movement of the same instrument.


Comparitor
A device of some kind that compares two inputs.


Compounding
The payment, through interest, based on the sum of the original
principal amount and its accrued interest.


Confidence Factor
A measure of the degree of likelihood that a rule is correct, which
may reflect the percentage of times that it has proven to be correct
in the past or just a subjective measure of our confidence in its
degree of reliability.


Confidence Level
The degree of assurance that a specified failure rate is not exceeded.


Confirmation
Indication that at least two indices, in the case of Dow theory the
industrials and the transportation, corroborate a market trend or a
turning point.


Congestion Area or Pattern

A series of trading days in which there is no visible progress in
price.


Consolidation
Also known as a congestion period. A pause that allows participants
in a market to reevaluate the market and sets the stage for the next
price move.


Consumer Price Index
The gauge of US inflation.


Continuation Chart
A chart in which the price scale for the data for the end of a given
contract and the data for the beginning of the next contract are
merged in order to ease the transition of one contract to the next.


Contract
An agreement as in options in which rights are exchanged by law.
Correlation Coefficient-When two random variables X and Y tend to
vary together. The measurement is given by the ratio of the
covariance of X and Y to the square root of the product of the
variance of X and the variance of Y.


Convergence
When futures prices and spot prices come together at the futures
expiration.


Conversion Arbitrage
Traders buy and sell two different securities (or synthetic
securities), forcing equivalent prices for equivalent securities.


Coppock Curve
Also Coppock Guide. A long-term price momentum indicator: a 10-month
weighted moving aver age of the sum of the 14-month rate of change
and the 11-month rate of change for the Djia.


Correction
Any price reaction within the market leading to an adjustment by as
much as one-third to two-thirds of the previous gain.


Correction Wave
A wave or cycle of waves moving against the current impulse trend's
direction.


Correlation Coefficient
When two random variables X and Y tend to vary together. The
measurement is given by the ratio of the covariance of X and T to the
square root of the product of the variance of X and the variance of
Y.


Correlation Coefficient
Degree to which two series of numbers plot as a straight line. A
correlation coefficient of 1 (or -1) indicates that the two series of
numbers plot exactly along a straight line. A correlation coefficient
of zero indicates that there is no straight line relationship between
the two series of numbers. As applied to two portfolios, a high
correlation coefficient for the relative returns indicates that the
portfolio values have moved in tandem and a low correlation
coefficient means the opposite. When the correlation coefficient is
high, one portfolio could have been used as a surrogate or a hedge
for the other.


Correlogram
A numerical and graphical display of the test statistics of an
autocorrelation diagnostic routine.


Cost Basis
The cost of a given share or group of stock shares.


Countermove
A price bar showing movement opposite to the direction of the prior
time period; a retracement.


Covariance
Multiplies the deviation of each variable from its mean, adds those
products and then divides by the number of observations.


Cover
Purchasing back a contract sold earlier.


Covered Write
Writing a call against a long position in the underlying stock. By
receiving a premium, the writer intends to realize additional return
on the underlying common stock or gain some element of protection
(limited to the amount of the premium less transaction costs) from a
decline in the value of that underlying stock.


Crack Spreads
The spread between crude oil and its products: heating oil and
unleaded gasoline plays a major role in the trading process.


Credit Spread
The difference in value of two options, where the value of the one
sold exceeds the value of the one purchased.


Cross Correlations
The extent to which the revenue streams of individual traders within
a single enterprise tend to exhibit similar patterns over time.


CTI2
Market Profile terminology for commercial clearing members, as
opposed to CTI1, local floor traders.


Cup and Handle

An accumulation pattern observed on bar charts. The pattern lasts
from seven to 65 weeks; the cup is in the shape of a "U" and the
handle is usually more than one or two weeks in duration. The handle
is a slight downward drift with low trading volume from the right-
hand side of the formation.


Current Ratio
The current assets of a company divided by its current liabilities.
Balance-sheet strength indication.


Curve
The continuous image of the unit interval.


Curve-Fitting
Developing complicated rules that map known conditions.


CUSIP
The number assigned by the Committee of Uniform Security
Identification Procedure that appears on all securities documents.
Each security is given a number so that it is easily identifiable.


Cutoff Frequency
A point where higher frequency cycles will not pass through a filter
(e.g., a 10-day SMA will eliminate cycles of 20 days or less).


Cycle
A variation where a point of observation returns to its origin.




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The Traders' Glossary©
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%D
A stochastics indicator that has had its values smoothed a second
time, usually with a three-period moving average.


Daily Range
The difference between the high and low price during one trading day.


Data Preprocessing
Altering data to some extent to be more accurately analyzed;
smoothing, reducing unwanted data, removing trend. Processing data is
mathematically transforming the data from one form into another with
the goal of amplifying pertinent information for traders.


Dead Cat Bounce
A rebound in a market that sees prices recover and come back up
somewhat.


Debit Spread
The difference in value of two options, where the value of the long
position exceeds the value of the short position.


Deductive Logic
Logic traditionally used in expert systems, which defines a method
for reasoning from the general to the specific.


Deep-in-the-Money
A deep-in-the-money call option has the strike price of the option
well below the current price of the underlying instrument. A deep-in-
the-money put option has the strike price of the option well above
the current price of the underlying instrument.


Degrees of Freedom
The number of independent observations; the number of observations
minus the number of parameters to be estimated.


Delay
The amount of time that elapses between a change in an input event
and the resultant change in a related output event or time series.


Delta
The amount by which the price of an option changes for every dollar
move in the underlying instrument.


Delta-Hedged
An options strategy that protects an option against small price
changes in the option's underlying instrument. These hedges are
constructed by taking a position in the underlying instrument that is
equal in magni tude but opposite in sign (+/-) to the option's delta.


Delta Neutral
This is an "options/options" or "options/underlying instrument"
position constructed so that it is rela tively insensitive to the
price movement of the underlying instruments. This is arranged by
selecting a calculated ratio of offsetting short and long positions.


Delta Position
A measure of option price vs. the underlying futures contract or
stock price.


Demand Index
An index that shows the buying and selling power of markets and
stocks from mathematical calcu lations of volume and price ratios.


Density Function
For any measure m , a function that gives rise to m when integrated
with respect to some other specified measure. A probability density
function is a function whose integral over any set gives the
probability that a random variable has values in this set.


Dependence
A relationship between two different experimental results in which
the first result does not directly influence the chances of the
second result occurring, but instead, the two results are indirectly
related because they are subject to influences from a common outside
factor.


Derivatives
Financial contracts the value of which depend on the value of the
underlying instrument commodity, bond, equity, currency or a
combination.


Deterministic
Known in advance when the sum of one-step ahead forecast mean squared
errors is zero.


Deterministic
The fundamental continuous effect of an exogenous variable such as
money supply that can be deter mined to be explanatory.


Deterministic System
A system in which the outcome is determined by an equation; a system
in which cause and effect is easily determined.


Detrend
To remove the general drift, tendency, or bent of a set of
statistical data as related to time.


Difference-in-Means Test
A statistical test that indicates the likelihood of observing the
difference if the true differ ence were zero. A large value of this
statistic leads to nonacceptance of the null hypothesis that the true
difference is zero.


Differencing
Subtracting previous from current values to obtain a stationary
(detrended) time series: P stationary = Pt - Pt-1.


Diffusion Equation
A partial differential equation, used in solving a random walk
problem.


Diffusion Index
An index that measures the percentage of individual series that are
positive compared with the aggregate group that is, the percentage of
S&P groups that are above their 30-week moving average.


Directional Movement Index (DMI)
Developed by J. Welles Wilder, DMI measures market trend.


Distribution
Any set of related values described by an average (that is, mean),
which identifies its midpoint, a measure of spread (that is, standard
distribution) and a measure of its shape (that is, skew or kurtosis).


Divergence

When two or more averages or indices fail to show confirming trends.


Dividend
Stockholder payment of a share of a company's profits.


Dividend Reinvestment Plan
A program offered by a publicly held company in which dividends are
used to buy more shares of the company.


Doji
A session in which the open and close are the same (or almost the
same). Different varieties of doji lines (such as a gravestone or
long-legged doji) depend on where the opening and close are in
relation to the entire range. Doji lines are among the most important
individual candlestick lines. They are also components of important
candlestick patterns.


Dollar Cost Averaging
Using the same amount of funds to regularly invest (often quarterly
or monthly) and not take into consideration whether the securities
being purchased are high or low in price. By using this method, an
investor will see an average between their investment costs and the
market's up and down movements.


Double Bottom (Top)
The price action of a security or market average where it has
declined (advanced) two times to the same approximate level,
indicating the existence of a support (resistance) level and a
possibility that the down ward (upward) trend has ended.


Double-Smoothed
A price series that has been smoothed by a mathematical technique
such as a moving average. This first series of smoothed price data is
then smoothed a second time.


Double Top
See Double Bottom. A price pattern seen on a chart. The patterns
occurs when prices rise to a resistance level on significant volume,
retreat to a support level, and subsequently return to the resistance
level on decreased volume. Prices then decline and break through the
support level, marking the beginning of a new downtrend in the price
of the stock.


Drawdown
The reduction in account equity as a result of a trade or series of
trades.


Drunkard's Walk
See Random walk.


Durbin-Watson Statistic
The probability that first order correlation exists. With a range
between zero and 4, the closer to 2.0, the lower the probability is.


Dynamic Data Exchange
Ability to automatically update an application from within another
application.


Dynamic Linked Language
Refers to programming code that can be used ("called") by your main
program while running under Windows.


Early Entry
A large price movement in one direction within the first 15 minutes
after the open of the daily session.


Earnings Estimates
The estimated earnings projected for a company for a fiscal year.


Efficient Market Theory
All known information is already discounted by the market and
reflected in the price due to market participants acting upon the
information.


Elasticity
The ability to recover an original configuration.


Electronic Communications Network
Independent execution systems set up by brokerage firms, matching new
retail limit orders with compatible orders already in the system.


Elliott Wave Theory

A pattern-recognition technique published by Ralph Nelson Elliott in
1939, which holds that the stock market follows a rhythm or pattern
of five waves up and three waves down to form a complete cycle of
eight waves. The three waves down are referred to as a "correction"
of the preceding five waves up.


EMA
See Exponential Moving Average.


Engulfing Pattern
In candlestick terminology, a multiple candlestick line pattern; a
major reversal signal with two opposing-color real bodies making up
the pattern. (Also referred to as tsutsumi. )


Envelope
Lines surrounding an index or indicator that is, trading bands.


Entry
The point at which a trader gets into a position in the market.


Equilibrium Market
A price region that represents a balance between demand and supply.


Equivolume Chart

Created by Richard W. Arms, a chart in which the vertical axis is the
high-low range for each day, while the horizontal axis represents the
volume of shares of stock or the number of contracts traded for the
day. The purpose of the chart is to highlight the relationship
between price and volume.


ERISA
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act.


Estimated EPS Change
(%) Change in estimated mean earnings for the current fiscal year
from the last month, last three months and last six months to the
current month.


Eurodollar
Dollars deposited in foreign banks, with the futures contract
reflecting the rates offered between London branches of top US banks
and foreign banks.


Evening Star Pattern
The bearish counterpart of the morning star pattern; a top reversal,
it should be acted on if it arises after an uptrend.


Exchange-Traded Funds
Collections of stocks that are bought and sold as a package on an
exchange, principally the American Stock Exchange (AMEX), but also
the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the Chicago Board Options
Exchange (CBOE).


Ex-Dividend Date
The day on or after which the right to receive a current dividend is
not automatically transferred to a buyer.


Exercise
The process by which the holder of an option makes or receives
delivery of shares of the underlying secu rity.


Exit
The point at which a trader closes out of a trade.


Expert Systems
Dynamic but not adaptable, expert systems are rule-driven systems
that cannot learn as the result of new information being fed into its
system as opposed to neural networks, which can.


Expiration
The last day on which an option can be traded.


Explained
The relative reduction in the variation of variable Y that can be
attributed to a knowledge of variable X and its relationship to Y.


Exponential Moving Average
The EMA for day D is calculated as:where PR is the price on day D and
a (alpha) is a smoothing constant . Alpha may be estimated as 2/
(n+1), where n is the simple moving average length. Another form of
the formula is


Exponential Smoothing
A mathematical-statistical method of forecasting that assumes future
price action is a weighted average of past periods; a mathematic
series in which greater weight is given to more recent price action.


Expert Systems
Dynamic but not adaptable, expert systems are rule-driven systems
that cannot learn as the result of new information being fed into its
system as opposed to neural networks, which can. Most successful in
financial applications where governing rules are consistent.


Extreme
The highest or lowest price during any time period, a price extreme;
in the CBOT Market Profile, the highest/lowest prices the market
tests during a trading day.


F Statistics
The ratio of the variance explained by treatments to the unexpected
variance.


Fade
Selling a rising price or buying a falling price. A trader fading an
up opening would be short, for example.


Failure Swings

The inability of price to reaffirm a new high in an uptrend or a new
low in a downtrend.


Failure

In Elliott wave theory, a five-wave pattern of movement in which the
fifth impulse wave fails to move above the end of the third, or in
which the fifth wave does not contain the five subwaves.


Fair Values
The theoretical prices generated by an option pricing model (i.e. ,
the Black-Scholes option pricing model).


Fast Fourier Transform
A method by which to decompose data into a sum of sinusoids of
varying cycle length, with each cycle being a fraction of a common
fundamental cycle length.


Fast Market
A declaration that market conditions in the futures pit are so
disorderly temporarily to the extent that floor brokers are not held
responsible for the execution of orders.


Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
A self-sustaining, independent executive agency established to insure
deposits of all US banks entitled to federal deposit insurance, as
stated by the Federal Reserve Act.


Federal Reserve Bank
The governing central bank of the US.


Federal Open Market Committee
The policymaking committee of the Federal Reserve Bank. They meet on
a regular basis to make decisions on economic policy.


Feedforward Computation
Neural network in which neurons receive information only from the
previous layer and send outputs only to the following layer.


Fibonacci Ratio
The ratio between any two successive numbers in the Fibonacci
sequence, known as phi (f). The ratio of any number to the next
higher number is approximately 0.618 (known as the Golden Mean or
Golden Ratio), and to the lower number approximately 1.618 (the
inverse of the Golden Mean), after the first four numbers of the
series. The three important ratios the series provides are 0.618, 1.0
and 1.618.


Fibonacci Sequence
The sequence of numbers (0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144,
233...), discovered by the Italian mathematician Leonardo de Pisa in
the 13th century and the mathematical basis of the Elliott wave
theory, where the first two terms of the sequence are 0 and 1 and
each successive number in the sequence is the sum of the previous two
numbers. Technically, it is a sequence and not a series.


Fill
An executed order; sometimes the term refers to the price at which an
order is executed.


Fill Order
An order that must be filled immediately (or canceled).


Filter Point
The time at which a portfolio insurance program makes an adjusting
trade.


Filter
A device or program that separates data, signal or information in
accordance with specified criteria.


Fire
(verb) In expert system programming, ordinarily used to describe
the "triggering" or "activation" of a rule. A rule
is "fired," "triggered" or "activated" when its conditions have been
met, and its "consequents" (resultant facts) are added to the
knowledge base.


Fit Criterion
A quantitative comparable measure used to minimize model errors.


5% Confidence
Before conducting statistical tests, an analyst must select a
confidence level that will be used to determine when to accept the
null hypothesis. A 5% confidence level indicates that one is not
willing to accept the null hypothesis when the average net return
calculated from the sample could have occurred in only five of 100
samples if the null hypothesis were true.


Flaglike
Sideways market price action that has a slight drift in price counter
to the direction of the main trend; a consolidation phase.


Flash Fill
Order filled immediately by hand signal on the trading floor.


Float
The number of shares currently available for trading.


Floor Traders
Employees of brokerage firms working on exchange trading floors.


Flyers
Speculative or high-risk trades.


Forecast Origin
The most recent historical period for which data is used to build a
forecasting model. The next time period is the first forecast period.


Forward-Rate Agreements (FRAs)
Cash payments are made daily as the spot rate varies above or below
an agreed -upon forward rate and can be hedged with Eurodollar
futures.


Fractal Dimension
From fractal geometry, used to describe the irregular nature of
lines, curves, planes or volumes.


Fractals
Depiction of mathematical models that may be applied to identify data
patterns.


Framing or Frame Dependence
Behavioral finance. The tendency to evaluate current decisions within
the framework in which they have been presented. Making decisions
based on perceptions of risk/return rather than pure risk and return.
The usual example is categorization of where money comes from and
what it is "assigned" to instead of recognizing its fungibility. The
alternative is to speak of frame independence, wherein behavior is
not influenced by how the decision is framed. Examples are loss
aversion, hedonic editing, loss of self-control, regret, and money
illusion.


Frequency
The number of complete cycles observed per time period (i.e., cycles
per year).


Frequency Component
That part of a time series that may be represented as a cycle.


Frequency Distribution
A chart showing the number of times (or "frequency") an event occurs
for each possible value of the event. The vertical or y-axis of the
chart is the frequency axis and the horizontal or x-axis shows the
different values the variable being measured can take.


Frequency Domain
Variation in a time series is accounted for by cyclical components at
different frequencies.


Frequency Response
The transfer of the frequency of the underlying data, usually prices,
to the frequency of its moving average.


Front-Loaded
Commission and fees taken out of investment capital before the money
is put to work.


Front Month
The first expiration month in a series of months.


Front-Running
The practice of trading ahead of large orders to take advantage of
favorable price movement. Brokers are prohibited from this practice.


Fundamental Analysis
The analytical method by which only the sales, earnings and the value
of a given tradable's assets may be considered.


Fundamentals
The theory that holds that stock market activity may be predicted by
looking at the relative data and statistics of a stock as well as the
management of the company in question and its earnings.


Future Volatility
A prediction of what volatility may be like in the future.


Fuzzy Systems
A problem-solving method that can be applied to neural networks,
expert systems and other comput ing methods. Fuzzy systems process
inexact information inexactly and describe ambiguity rather than the
uncer tainty of an occurrence and are useful in performing control
and decision-making tasks. Not Boolean.
Glossary ( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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Gamma
The degree by which the delta changes with respect to changes in the
underlying instrument's price.


Gann's Square of 9
A trading tool that relates numbers, such as a stock price, to
degrees on a circle.


Gann Theory
Various analytical techniques developed by legendary trader W.D. Gann.


Gap
A day in which the daily range is completely above or below the
previous day's daily range.


Genetic Algorithms
Algorithms that mimic the characteristics associated with evolution
and that are well-suited to optimization problems such as optimizing
neural network parameters.


Genetic Programming
In artificial intelligence, this form of programming automatically
generates a program from a set of primitive constructs.


Give-up
When a broker executes an order for another broker's client and the
two brokers split the commission; the client pays nothing extra.


Golden Mean or Golden Ratio
The ratio of any two consecutive numbers in the Fibonacci sequence,
known as phi and equal to 0.618; a proportion that is an important
phenomenon in music, art, architecture and biology.


Golden Section
Any length divided so that the ratio of the smaller to the larger
part is equivalent to the ratio between the larger part and the whole
and is always 0.618.


Greeks
Jargon; a loose term encapsulating a set of risk variables used by
options traders.


Gross Domestic Product
Value of all goods and services produced domestically.


Growth Fund
A more speculative mutual fund made up primarily of the growth or
performance stocks that are expected to appreciate in price more than
the broad market over an extended time period.


Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GICs)
A single lump-sum deposit that earns a guaranteed interest until a
known maturity date. GICs are issued by insurance companies.


Hanning Weight

where weight (W) at point J in window width of N points is determined
by this formula.


Harami
In candlestick terminology, a small real body contained within a
relatively long real body.


Head and Shoulders
When the middle price peak of a given tradable is higher than those
around it.


Hedge Fund
A mutual fund involving speculative investing in stocks and options.


Herrick Payoff Index
An index requiring two inputs, one of which is a smoothing factor
known as the multiplying factor and the other of which is the value
of a one-cent move.


Heuristic Bias
The use of rules of thumb for decisions.


Heuristic Method
Problem solving approached by trying out several different methods
and comparing which pro vides the best solution.


Heuristics
(computer science)Computational rules of thumb. Distinct from
algorithms, which are programs guaran teed to generate the correct
result under all circumstances, heuristics may only turn out to be
correct a certain percentage of time.


Hidden node
Elements that give a neural network the ability to learn nonlinear
patterns. The hidden nodes math ematically transform inputs by
passing weighted sums of those inputs through nonlinear functions.


Hierarchical Neural Network
In artificial intelligence, a neural network in which predictions
derived from networks at one level of the hierarchy are incorporated
as inputs at another level. This architecture lends itself to faster
training, as each network focuses learning solely on its own output.


High Pass Frequency Filter
A detrending filter that lets pass the high frequency noise and
rejects low frequency trend. Implemented by first applying a low pass
filter to the data, then subtracting the filtered data from the
original data.


High-Ticking
To pay the offered price.


Hines Ratio
A modified put/call ratio that refines traditional option ratio
analysis by including the open interest figures in the equation and
can be defined as (Total put volume/Total put open interest) divided
by (Total call volume/Total call open interest)


Historic Volatility
How much contract price has fluctuated over a period of time in the
past; usually calculated by taking a standard deviation of price
changes over a time period.


Historical Data
A series of past daily, weekly or monthly market prices (open, high,
low, close, volume, open inter est).


Hook Day
A trading day in which the open is above/below the previous day's
high/low and the close is below/above the previous day's close with
narrow range.


Implied Alpha
The excess return expected from a stock to justify its current
weighing in the portfolio.


Implied Volatility
The volatility computed using the actual market prices of an option
contract and one of a number of pricing models. For example, if the
market price of an option rises without a change in the price of the
underlying stock or future, implied volatility will have risen.


Impulse
A sharply defined change in a series of input data being studied,
such as market prices or volume.


Impulse Wave

A wave or cycle of waves that carries the current trend further in
the same direction.


In Play
A stock that is the focus of a public bidding contest, as in a
takeover or bear raid.


In-the-Money
A call option whose strike price is lower than the stock or future's
price, or a put option whose strike price is higher than the
underlying stock or future's price. For example, when a commodity
price is $500, a call option with a strike price of $400 is
considered in-the-money.


Income Dividends
Payments to mutual fund shareholders consisting of dividends,
interest and short-term capital gains earned on the fund's portfolio
securities after deduction of operating expenses.


Index Fund
A mutual fund that replicates the behavior of a given index.


Inductive Logic
The progress from statements describing particular events to a
general statement.


Inefficient Markets
Behavioral finance. Driven by frame dependence and heuristic bias,
when market prices stray from fundamental values.


Initial Balance
The first or first two half-hour trading periods in the CBOT Market
Profile during which prices tend to converge; the initial auction of
the trading day.


Initial Public Offering
When a stock is officially available for the public to buy.


Inside Day

A day in which the daily price range is completely within the
previous day's daily price range.


Interest Rate Swaps
An arrangement that requires both sides of the transaction to make
payments to each other based on two different interest rates. The
most commonly traded requires one side to pay a fixed rate and the
other to pay a floating rate.


Intermarket Analysis
Observing the price movement of one market for the purpose of
evaluating a different market.


Intrinsic Value
The portion of an option's premium that is represented when the cash
market price is greater than the exercise price; a known constant
equal to the difference between the strike price and underlying
market price.


Investment Clubs
Small, private organizations in which a group of investors, usually
novices, pool their time and resources to learn more than they could
on their own about various forms of investments and then invest their
own money as a group.


IRA
Individual Retirement Account. An employer's retirement plan that, as
specified by tax law, allows employees to elect to have their federal
taxable income be deducted and set aside for retirement.


Irregular Flat

A type of Elliott wave correction that has a 3-3-5 wave pattern,
where the B wave terminates beyond the start of wave A. A "flat" is
in progress, implying that a larger pattern is developing. It will
contain waves of one higher degree than the A-B-C waves just
completed.


Island
Electronic communications network.


January Effect
The tendency for securities prices to recover in January after tax-
related selling is completed before the year-end.


Jumbo Certificate of Deposit
A CD worth at least $100,000.





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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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The Traders' Glossary©
of technical terms and topics

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( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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Use the "Find" command in your browser window to go directly to any
key word.

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Kagi
One of three types of Japanese candlestick charts that does not have
time on the horizontal axis.


Kalman Filters
A linear system in which the mean squared error between the desired
and the actual output is minimized when the input is a random signal.


Kelly's Law
Bet bigger when the odds are in your favor. In management wisdom, if
anything does go wrong, it will do so in triplicate. Also, an
executive will always go back to work early if no one takes him.


Knowledge Base
In artificial intelligence, a given inventory of knowledge specific
to a set of rules.


Kondratieff, Nikolai
Developer of a wave theory.


KST
Indicator developed by Martin Pring. A weighted summed rate of change
oscillator. Four different rates of change are calculated, smoothed,
multiplied by weights and then summed to form one indicator.


Kurtosis
Descriptive measure of how flat or pointed a distribution is.


Lag
The number of data points that a filter, such as a moving average,
follows or trails the input price data.


Latest Quarterly Earnings
(%) The percentage change from the latest earnings earnings reported
compared with the same quarter a year earlier.


Law of Series
A succession of random events, such as flipping a coin.


Lead
The number of data points that a filter, much as a moving average,
precedes the input price data.


LEAPS
Acronym for long-term equity anticipation securities , which are long-
term listed options, with maturities that can be as long as two and a
half years.


Least Squares Method
A technique of fitting a curve close to some given points that
minimizes the sum of the squares of the deviations of the given
points from the curve.


Leg
One side of a spread.


Leg Out
In rolling forward in futures, a method that would result in
liquidating a position.


Limit Move
A change in price that exceeds the limits set by the exchange on
which the contract is traded.


Limit Order
An order to buy or sell when a price is fixed.


Limit Up, Limit Down
Commodity exchange restrictions on the maximum upward or downward
movements permit ted in the price for a commodity during any trading
session day.


LISP
A programming language based on predicate logic and is the one most
commonly used in artificial intelligence applications.


Ljung-Box statistic
A chi-square test of significance of higher order correlation
existence. The marginal significance level is the probability that a
no more higher order correlation exists.


Load
Commission and fees taken out of investment capital; that is, the
situation in which a front-loaded mutual fund takes commission and
fees out of investment capital before the money is put to work.


Local
The trader in a pit of a commodity exchange who buys and sells for
his or her account.


Locked Limit
A market that, if not restricted, would seek price equilibrium
outside the limit but, instead, moves to the limit and ceases to
trade.


Long
Establishing ownership of the responsibilities of a buyer of a
tradable; holding securities in anticipation of a price increase in
that security.


Lookback Interval
The number of periods of historical data used for observation and
calculation.


Low Pass Frequency Filter
A data smoother or filter that lets pass low frequency trend
sinusoids and rejects high frequency noise (see SMA).


Low-Ticking
To sell at the bid price.


MACD
See Moving Average Convergence/Divergence.


Macro
A computer method commonly used in spreadsheets to automate
repetitive steps by recording the necessary keystrokes. The macro can
then be run and the keystrokes implemented.


Major Auction
The overall trend of the market such as might be observed on a bar
chart.


Managed Futures
A fund that uses the futures market as its primary asset.


Mandelbrot Set
Complex but structured pattern produced by an equation in which the
result is fed back into the equation repeatedly; self-similarity.


Mapping
A function, or relation between values.


Margin
In stock trading, an account in which purchase of stock may be
financed with borrowed money; in futures trading, the deposit placed
with the clearinghouse to assure fulfillment of the contract. This
amount varies daily and is settled in cash.


Marginal Significance Level of Test-Statistics
The probability distribution used to test the hypothesis that the
beta coefficient does not equal zero. A T-statistic of approximately
1.65 reflects a 0.90 or 90% confidence and the mar ginal significance
is 1-0.90 = 0.1 or 10%.


Marked to Market
At the end of each business day the open positions carried in an
account held at a brokerage firm are credited or debited funds based
on the settlement price of the open positions that day.


Market Breadth
The shares of a particular stock traded during a specific period.
Usually refers to the overall strength and trading volume of the
market.


Market If Touched
Resting order with the floor broker that becomes a market order to be
executed if the trigger price is traded.


Market Maker
A broker or bank continually prepared to make a two-way price to
purchase or sell for a security or currency.


Market on Close
An order specification that requires the broker to get the best price
available on the close of trading, usually during the last five
minutes of trading.


Market Order
Instructions to the broker to immediately sell to the best available
bid or to buy from the best available offer.


Market Risk
The uncertainty of returns attributable to fluctuation of the entire
market.


Market Sentiment
Crowd psychology, typically a measurement of bullish or bearish
attitudes among investors and traders.


Market Timing
Using analytical tools to devise entry and exit methods.


Market Value
Company value determined by investors, obtained by multiplying the
current price of company stock by the common shares outstanding.


Markov Chain
A set of processes where the probabilities for the next state are
dependent on the present state.


Martingale
From roulette; a tactical system that requires doubling your bet
after each loss, so that winning once you recoup the amount
originally bet.


MATIF
The Marche A Terme Des Instruments Financiers exchange in Paris.


Maxima
The highest or maximum value.


Maximax
Optimistic decision-making that identifies the decision alternative
with the best possible outcomes.


Maximin
Pessimistic decision-making that identifies the decision alternative
with the worst possible outcomes.


Maximum Adverse Excursion

A historical measurement of the closed losing trades versus the
closed profitable trades of a trading system. Used to determine the
stop-loss level that can be used that will allow winning trades to
remain; the extreme unfavorable price level reached for both
profitable and unprofitable trades.


Maximum Entropy Method
More flexible than Fourier analysis, the maximum entropy method is
both a tool for spectrum analysis and a method of adaptive filtering
and trend forecasting. As a tool for spectrum analysis, the MEM
system can provide high resolution spectra for identifying the
dominant data cycles within relatively short time series, such as
open, high, low, close, volume and open interest, or study results,
such as RSI, TRIX, and so on. (Fourier analysis, in contrast, gives
best results when applied to time series of six months or longer.) As
a forecasting tool, MEM is used in conjunction with moving averages
to forecast lower and upper trend channels in the data.


Maximum Entropy Spectrum Analysis
See Maximum Entropy Method.


Mean
When the sum of the values is divided by the number of observation.


Mean Deviation
The average absolute value of the difference between the population
of numbers and the mean.


Mean P/L
The average profitability of a trader's account, as measured over a
given period.


Mean Return
The average monthly total return of a stock. The total return is
price change added to dividends.


Mean Reverting
The term adopted in academic literature for one possible state of a
price series: that state when price is oscillating randomly about
some (unknown) mean value. That is, it is not trending.


Median Line
The line that is drawn from an extreme that bisects a line drawn
through the next corrective phase after the pivot point. See Andrews
Method.


MEM
See Maximum Entropy Method.


Mental Stop-Loss
A stop-loss order kept in your head instead of instructing your
broker.


MESA
See Maximum Entropy Spectrum Analysis.


Minima
The lowest or minimum value.


Minor Auction
The latest trend of the market, i.e., what it is doing now.


Mode
The most frequently occurring value.


Model
Equation.


Modern Portfolio Theory
Investing theory in which portfolio managers estimate and manage risk
and return.


Modified Endowment Contract
Life insurance in which funds such as policy loans, assignments,
pledges, and partial surrenders are considered gross income and
subject to income tax.


Momentum
A time series representing change of today's price from some fixed
number of days back in history.


Momentum Filter
A measure of change, derivative or slope of the underlying trend in a
time series. Implemented by first applying a low pass filter to the
data and then applying a differencing operation to the results.


Momentum Indicator
A market indicator utilizing price and volume statistics for
predicting the strength or weakness of a current market and any
overbought or oversold conditions, and to note turning points within
the market.


Money Flow
A number of technical indicators that incorporate volume and price
action to measure buying or selling pressure.


Money Market
The market in which dealers trade riskless, short-term securities
such as certificates of deposit and Treasury bills.


Money Market Fund
A mutual fund made up of money market instruments that are short term
in nature.


Money Stop
A fixed amount of money that a market participant would lose if a
stop were hit.


Monowave
In Elliott wave theory, a single wave within a range of waves.


Morning Star
A bottom reversal pattern, according to Steve Nison a signal that the
bulls have seized control.


Moving Average

A mathematical procedure to smooth or eliminate the fluctuations in
data and to assist in determin ing when to buy and sell. Moving
averages emphasize the direction of a trend, confirm trend reversals
and smooth out price and volume fluctuations or "noise" that can
confuse interpretation of the market; the sum of a value plus a
selected number of previous values divided by the total number of
values.


Moving Average Crossovers

The point where the various moving average lines intersect each other
or the price line on a moving average price bar chart. Technicians
use crossovers to signal price-based buy and sell opportunities.


Moving Average Model
A time series equation representing an observed value at time t as a
linear combination of present and past random shocks et (forecast
errors). A moving-average process of order Q, MA(q), may be written:


Moving Average Convergence/ Divergence (MACD)
The crossing of two exponentially smoothed moving averages that are
plotted above and below a zero line. The crossover, movement through
the zero line, and divergences generate buy and sell signals.


Moving Window
Snapshot of a portion of a time series at an instant in time. The
window is moved along the time series at a constant rate.


Multicolinearity
Two variables that have a correlation of greater than 0.70 or less
than -0.70 in a regression model. The final result is the two
variables explaining the same portion of variation where either
variable would be suffi cient.


Multiple Linear Regression
More than one independent variable is used to account for the
variability in one depen dent variable.


Mutual Fund
A company that invests money of its shareholders in a variety of
areas, usually stocks.


Glossary ( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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The Traders' Glossary©
of technical terms and topics

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( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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key word.

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Naked Put
The writer of a put option contract who is not short the underlying
security.


Narrow Range Day
A trading day with a smaller price range relative to the previous
day's price range.


National Association of Investors Corporation
Also known as the National Association of Investment Clubs.


Near-Month Contract/Far-Month Contract
Contract whose expiration is near/far.


Near-the-Money
An option with a strike price close to the current price of the
underlying tradable.


Neckline

A trendline drawn along the support or resistance points of various
reversal and consolidation pattern (i.e., head and shoulder, double
and triple top/bottom formations).


Negative Amortization
This means that a payment of the stated size is insufficient to repay
even the interest on the debt, meaning the total debt actually
increases each month instead of falling.


Negative Divergence
When two or more averages, indices or indicators fail to show
confirming trends.


Net Asset Value
The total market value of all securities contained in a mutual fund;
also known as price per share.


Neural Network
An artificial intelligence program that is capable of learning
through a training process of trial and error.


No-Action Letter
The Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) agrees to take no
action to block a proposal by an exchange or company in conducting
some aspect of the securities business. The aspect could be for
almost anything, but the most common is a new contract listing or a
new security issuance.


No-Load
Without any sales charge. For mutual funds, shares sold at net asset
value.


Noise
Price and volume fluctuations that can confuse interpretation of
market direction.


Noisy Signal
A signal in which the effects of random influences cannot be
dismissed.


Nonlinear Dynamics Analysis
Analysis of relationships that start from well-defined outcomes to
complex and cha otic results.


Nonlinear Statistics
Statistics theory that attempts to define probability distribution
from disorder to either a more orderly state or a sharp trend
reversal, such as stock market fluctuations.


Non-Seasonal Autocorrelation
Autocorrelation that shows up other than at 12-month lag intervals.


Non-Trend Day
A narrow range day lacking any discernible movement in either
direction.


Normal Distribution
For the purposes of statistical testing, the simulated net returns
are assumed to be drawn from a particular distribution. If net
returns are drawn from a normal distribution, low and high returns
are equally likely, and the most likely net return in a quarter is
the average net return.


Normalized
Adjusting a time series so that the series lies in a prescribed
normal, standard range.


Notice Day
The day that a notice of intent to deliver is issued to a futures
contract holder.


Null Hypothesis
The hypothesis that there is no validity to the specific claim that
two variations (treatments) of the same thing can be distinguished by
a specific procedure.


Observer
A concept used in radar research, applicable to trading, in how often
and what manner detection or radar contact is achieved.


OBV
See On-Balance Volume.


Odd Lot
An order to buy/sell fewer than 100 shares of stock.


Off Farm
The amount of stocks held by nonproducers including supplies held at
mills, elevators, terminals, and processors.


On Farm
The amount of stocks held by producers.


On-Balance Volume
Plotted as a line representing the cumulative total of volume. The
volume from a day's trading with a higher close when compared with
the previous day is assigned a positive value, while volume on a
lower close from the previous day is assigned a negative value.
Traders look for a confirmation of a trend in OBV with the market or
a divergence between the two as an indication of a potential reversal.


One-Tailed T-Test
A statistical test of significance for a distribution that changes
its shape as N gets smaller; based on a variable t , equal to the
difference between the mean of the sample and the mean of the
population divided by a result obtained by dividing the standard
deviation of the sample by the square root of the number of
individuals in the sample.


OPEC
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Opening Print
The first price of a stock that comes across the ticker for the
session.


Open Trades
Current trades that are still held active in the customer's account.


Open TRIN
n -day open TRIN =


Opening Call
A period at the opening of a futures market in which the price for
each contract is established by outcry.


Opening Range
The range of prices that occur during the first 30 seconds to five
minutes of trading, depending on the preference of the individual
analyst.


Opportunity Costs
Income foregone by the commitment of resources to another use.


Optimization
A methodology by which a system is developed with rules tailored to
fit the data in question precisely.


Option
A contract that provides the right but not the obligation to buy or
sell a specified amount of a security within a specified time period.


Optional Cash Purchase
Buying additional shares made through the dividend reinvestment
account.


Order
The number of days of past price history used to predict the
following day's price.


Oscillator
Technical indicator used to identify overbought and oversold price
regions. An indicator that detrends data, such as price.


Out-of-Sample
An item within the range of a sample that does not conform to the
mean of the sample.


Out-of-the-Money
A call option whose exercise price is above the current market price
of the underlying security or futures contract. For example, if a
commodity price is $500, then a call option purchased for a strike
price of $550 is considered out-of-the-money.


Out Trade
A mismatched trade between two traders in the pit, and which is
settled the next day.


Outdata
The result (singular) stemming from a statistical test.


Outlier
A value removed from the other values to such an extreme that its
presence cannot be attributed to the random combination of chance
causes.


Outside Reversal Month
A month in which the recent monthly trading range exceeds the
previous month's range and closes opposite (reverses) the previous
month's close.


Overbought
Market prices that have risen too steeply and too fast.


Overfitting
The parameters of a trading system are selected to return the highest
profit over the historical data.


Overfitting
A model developed with rules tailored to fit the historical data
precisely.


Overshoot
To pass beyond or over a specific targeted level.


Oversold
Market prices that have declined too steeply and too fast.


Overbought/Oversold Indicator
An indicator that attempts to define when prices have moved too far
and too fast in either direction and thus are vulnerable to a
reaction.


Par
The full principal amount of an investment instrument.


Parabola
The U-shaped curve in the plane given by the equation of the form


Parabolic

Of, having the form of or relating to a parabola.


Parameter
A variable, set of data, or rule that establishes a precise format
for a model.


Pareto's Law
A law that states that 80% of results come from 20% of the effort.


PASCAL
Block-structured programming language developed originally as an aid
to instruction, now widely used for applications development.


Pennants
A short compact wedge accompanied by receding volume.


Percentile
A value on a scale of one hundred that indicates the percent of a
distribution that is equal to or below it.


Perceptron
A pattern-recognition machine, based on an analogy to the human
nervous system, capable of learning by means of a feedback system
that reinforces correct answers and discourages wrong ones.


Pessimistic Rate of Return
A statistic that adjusts the usual wins/losses statistic to estimate
the worst return from trading results. It reduces the number of wins
by the square root of the actual number and increase the number of
losses by the square root of the actual number of losses. The
resulting numbers of wins or losses are multiplied by the average win
or loss and the sum of the resulting wins/losses is divided by the
required investment.


Phase Delay
The time lag that a filter falls behind the pre-filtered data.


Phasor
Used to describe the frequency, amplitude, and phase of all frequency
components of the signal.


Pivot Point
In market activity, a price reversal point.


Point and Figure Chart

A price-only chart that plots up prices as Xs and down prices as Os.
The minimum price recorded is called the box size. Typically, a three-
box reversal indicates a change in the direction of prices.


Position Management Ratio
The ratio of profits extracted on winning transactions versus losses
suffered on trades that liquidate unprofitably.


Premium
The price a buyer pays to an option writer for granting an option
contract.


Preprocessing
Altering data to some extent to be more accurately analyzed;
smoothing, reducing unwanted data, removing trend. Processing data is
mathematically transforming the data from one form into another with
the goal of amplifying the pertinent information for traders.


Prewhitening
Removing the bulk of first, second and possibly third order
autocorrelations using non-linear regres sion.


Price/Earnings Ratio
Stock price divided by annual earnings per share.


Price to Sales Ratio
The price of a stock divided by sales-per-share of the company in the
most recent fiscal year.


Probability Density Function
A graph showing the probability of occurrence of a particular data
point (price).


Profit Margin Expansion
In long-term reference, a measure of a company's net profit margin in
the latest reported quarter divided by profit margin in the fiscal
year previous. In short-term reference, a measure of a company's net
profit margin in the latest reported quarter divided by profit margin
in the quarter immediately preceding.


Profit Taking
Selling tradables that have appreciated since initial purchase in
order to take advantage of the appreciation.


Program Trading
Trades based on signals from computer programs, usually entered
directly from the trader's com puter to the market's computer system.


Prospectus
Report published by the company that operates a mutual fund. It
describes the fund's investment objectives; its managers and their
experience; the fees and charges associated with the fund; and
policies and restrictions.


Put Option
A contract to sell a specified amount of a stock or commodity at an
agreed time at the stated exercise price.


Pyramid
To increase holdings that an investor has by using the most buying
power available in a margin account with paper and real profits.


Quarterly Earnings Change
(%) Historical earnings change between the earnings most recently
reported and the quarter preceding.


Quarterly Net Profit Margin
(%) Net operating earnings after taxes for the latest quarter divided
by revenues for the quarter.


Quick Ratio
Indicates a company's financial strength; a company's cash and
equivalent divided by current liabili ties.


Quotron
A proprietary financial data service.


R-squared
The percentage of variation in the dependent variable that is
explained by the regression equation. A relative measure of fit.


Rally Tops
A price level that concludes a short-term rally in an ongoing trend.
A bull market will be made up of a series of rally tops.


Random Shock
The unexplained component of an equation that models a time series (e
forecast errors).


Random Walk
A theory that says there is no sequential correlation between prices
from one day to the next, that prices will act unpredictably as they
seek a level in response to supply and demand.


Range
The difference between the high and low price during a given period.


Range Extension
In the CBOT Market Profile, a price movement beyond the range set by
the initial auction.


Rate of Change
In which today's closing price is divided by the closing price n days
ago. Multiply by 100. Subtract 100 from this value. ((C today/Cn) *
100) - 100.


Ratio
The relation that one quantity bears to another of the same kind,
with respect to magnitude or numerical value.


RBAR-squared
The R-squared value adjusted for the number of degrees of freedom.


Reaction
A short-term decline in price.


Realized/Unrealized P/L
The difference between trading revenues that are generated on
positions that have been offset and closed, versus those associated
with the marking of open positions to current market prices.


Rectangle
A trading area bounded by horizontal, or near horizontal, lines. It
can either be a reversal or continuation pattern, depending on the
breakout.


Recursive
A process that is repetitive and usually dependent upon the results
of the previous repetition.


Regression (simple)
A mathematical way of stating the statistical linear relationship
between one independent and one dependent variable.


Relative Return
The annualized return on an investment in excess of the average three-
month US Treasury bill yield during the same period as the
investment. This statistic measures the return on an investment
relative to what would have otherwise been earned on a risk-free
investment.


Relative Return Standard Deviation
Measures the amount of variability of the relative return. A large
relative return standard deviation indicates that the relative return
experienced during the holding period fluctuated dramatically and, if
the holding period was different, a significantly different relative
return would have been achieved. A small relative return standard
deviation indicates the opposite.


Relative Strength
A comparison of the price performance of a stock to a market index
such as Standard & Poor's 500 stock index.


Relative Strength Index
An indicator invented by J. Welles Wilder and used to ascertain
overbought/oversold and divergent situations.


Renko
A kind of candlestick chart that does not take time into account for
constructing the chart.


Representativeness
Behavioral finance. Judgment by stereotype.


Residual Value
The standard deviation of the unexplained portion of the monthly
return.


Resistance
A price level at which rising prices have stopped rising and either
moved sideways or reversed direction; usually seen as a price chart
pattern.


Resistance Line
On a chart, a line drawn indicating the price level at which rising
prices have stopped rising and have moved sideways or reversed
direction.


Response
The change in value of the average in response to the impulse.


Resting Order
An order placed with a condition or qualifer but not yet executed.


Retention Rate
Percentage of a firm's aftertax profits that can be put to those
earnings retained.


Retracement
A price movement in the opposite direction of the previous trend.


Return on Assets
(%ROA) The net earnings of a company divided by its assets.


Return on Equity
(%ROE) the net earnings of a company divided by its equity.


Reverse Exponential Moving Average
An exponential moving average computed working backward through the
time series, rather than forward, as is the case with a standard EMA.
A REMA is used so the target would reflect only future price
behavior, not past action that would induce spurious correlation.


Reward-Risk Ratio
Monthly excess return to risk comparison, calculated by dividing
alpha by standard deviation. (A ratio better than 0.4 is excellent.)


Reward-Risk Rank
Stocks ranked in descending order by reward-risk ratio.


Reversal Gap
A chart formation where the low of the last day is completely above
the previous day's range with the close above midrange and above the
open.


Reversal Stop
A stop that, when hit, is a signal to reverse the current trading
position, i.e., from long to short. Also known as stop and reverse.


Rich
Price higher than expected.


Risk (Implied)
In which the formula produces the percentage overbought/oversold for
a contract using the price, a moving average and the option's implied
volatility.


Risk-Adjusted Return on Capital (RAROC)
Another measure of risk-adjusted profitability, derived as the ratio
between P/L and value at risk.


Roll
Substituting a far option for a near option on the same underlying
instrument at the same strike price; also to roll forward or roll
over.


Root Mean Square Percentage Error
(Rmspe) Square root of the average sum of squared errors experessed
as a percentage.


Rotation
Moving funds from one sector to another sector of the stock market as
the business cycle unfolds.


Roth IRA
An individual retirement account where contributions are not
deductible, taxes are not paid on distributions and allows penalty-
free withdrawals for first-time homebuyers and retirees.


Running Market
A market wherein prices are changing rapidly in one direction with
very few or no price changes in the opposite direction.


Running Total
Each day's value is added to yesterday's total or subtracted if the
value is negative.


Sales Growth
The growth in sales in a company.


Sales Load
A service charge of a mutual fund that is added to the costs of
owning a stake in the fund.


Saucer Base
Similar to a cup and handle formation, but the saucer base is
shallower and rounder in shape.


Savings and Loan Investment Contracts (SLICs)
A negotiated-term deposit issued by a savings and loan.


Scallop
Chart formation in which the price dips momentarily, forming a cup,
before resuming its upward course.


Scalp
In commodities, purchasing and selling in equal amounts so there is
no net position at the end of the trading day; a speculative attempt
to make a quick profit by buying at the initial offering price in the
hope the issue will increase and can be sold.


Schwarz-a-tron
A dedicated computer system for options calculations and simulations.


Seasonal Autocorrelation
Autocorrelation that shows up at 12-, 24-, 36- and 48-month lag
intervals or at four, eight, 12 and 16 quarterly lags.


Seasonal Trend
A consistent but short-lived rise or drop in market activity that
occurs due to predictable changes in climate or calendar.


Seasonality
A consistent and predictable change in market activity that occurs
from consistent and predictable events.


Sector Fund
A mutual fund that concentrates on trading a range of securities
within a broad industry group, such as technology, energy or
financial services.


Sector Rotation
When a block of investment professionals cash out of one industry
sector to invest in another.


Secular Trend
Pertaining to a long indefinite period of time.


Security Selection Ratio
The percentage of trades in a given account that liquidate profitably.


Seed
The first value used to start a calculation. For example, an
exponentially smoothed moving average (EMA) uses the previous day's
EMA for the calculation. On the first day's calculation of the EMA,
you could use a simple moving average as the seed for the EMA.


SelectNet
A Nasdaq execution technology.


Self-Affine Transformation
A rescaling procedure used in fractal geometry and performed on a two-
variable system. For example, in a system utilizing an x-axis and y-
axis representing time and price, the x-axis could be rescaled by one
ratio and/or procedure while the y-axis is rescaled by a different
ratio and/or procedure.


Selling Short
Selling a security and then borrowing the security for delivery with
the intent of replacing the security at a lower price. In futures
trading, selling short is to assume the responsibility of the seller
vs. the buyer in the establishment of the futures contract between
parties.


Semilog
Scaling method. With semilog, the distance between each point of a
chart is exponential. Semilog scaling is used to compare relative
price changes rather than physical point changes.


Sensitivity
The rate of change of the moving average in response to the movement
of the underlying data. The most sensitive period is that in which
the rate of change of the moving average is fastest in response to
changes in the sinewave.


Serial Correlation
The systematic relationship between successive observation of a time
series.


Serially Independent
A number that is unrelated to the previous number in a given series
in any way.


Settlement
The price at which all outstanding positions in a stock or commodity
are marked to market. Typically, the closing price.


Shapiro-Wilkes Test
A statistical test indicating the likelihood that the sample of
simulated net returns was drawn from a normal distribution. A small
value of this statistic leads to nonacceptance of the null hypothesis
that the sample is drawn from a normal distribution.


Shareholder of Record
Share owner of company stock as registered in company files.


Sharpe Ratio Method
(Also see Sterling ratio method) The Sharpe Ratio Method is the
classic return/risk measure, given by:

where:
E = Expected return
I = Risk-free interest rate
sd = Standard deviation of returns

Both the Sharpe and the Sterling ratio methods compare returns with
variability of returns, as opposed to risk of loss of original
investment.


Shaved Candlestick
In candlestick charting, when the shadows of a candle which mark the
area between the real body and the extremes and give the appearance
of being wicks are absent.


Short Interest
Shares that have been sold short but not yet repurchased.


Short Interest Ratio
A ratio that indicates the number of trading days required to
repurchase all of the shares that have been sold short. A short
interest ratio of 2.50 would tell us that based on the current volume
of trading, it will take two and a half days' volume to cover all
shorts.


Signal
In the context of stock or commodity time series historical data,
this is usually daily or weekly prices.


Signal Line
In artificial intelligence, a numeric variable that is prevalued in
the knowledge base. In moving average jargon, the first moving
average is smoothed by a second moving average. The second moving
average is the signal line.


Signature Medallion Guaranty
Program used by banks and other institutions to verify a signature.


Significance
The probability of rejection on the basis of a statistical test and a
hypothesis that there is no validity to the specific claim that two
variations of the same thing can be distinguished by a specific
procedure.


Simple Moving Average
The arithmetic mean or average of a series of prices over a period of
time. The longer the period of time studied (that is, the larger the
denominator of the average), the less impact an individual data point
has on the average.


Simple Regression
A mathematical way of stating the statistical linear relationship
between one independent and one dependent variable.


Sinewave
A wave whose amplitude varies as the sine of a linear function of
time.


Skew
A descriptive measure of lopsidedness in a distribution.


Slippage
The difference between estimated transaction costs and actual
transaction costs.


SMA
See Simple Moving Average.


Small Order Execution System (SOES)
Computerized system developed by Nasdaq for immediate electronic
execution of up to 1,000 shares of stock.


Smoothing
Simply, a mathematical technique that removes excess data variability
while maintaining a correct ap praisal of the underlying trend.


Specialist
A trader on the market floor assigned to fill bids/orders in a
specific stock out of his/her own account when the order has no
competing bid/order to ensure a fair and orderly market.


Specify
To set the parameters and variables of a given model.


Spectrum
The frequency decomposition of time series data. This is used to
detect periodic fluctuations or cycles in historical price data.


Spike
A sharp rise in price in a single day or two; may be as great as 15-
30%, indicating the time for an immediate sale.


Spline
The linear interpolation between two adjacent points on a curve.


Spot Month
In trading, the current contract month. Also known as the front month.


Spot Prices
Same as cash price, the price at which a commodity is selling at a
particular time and place.


Spread
A trade in which two related contracts/stocks/bonds/options are
traded to exploit the relative differences in price change between
the two.


Spread Rolls
Using a spread order to bridge the closing of one position and the
establishment of a new one.


Spring
A two-day pattern in which on the first day, the market declines
below a support point, while the next day sees the market move
strongly back up into the congestion area.


Spring
Another term for upthrust; occurs when price moves above a pivot top
and a widespread reversal ensues as follows: a) two previous closes
are reversed, b) close is below pivot top, c) close is below opening
and mid-range, d) daily price range is greater than the previous
day's range.


Stair-stepping
In which market activity is characterized by a trend, then sideways
movements, followed by another trend and further sideways movement.


Standard Deviation
The positive square root of the expected value of the square of the
difference between a random variable and its mean. A measure of the
fluctuation in a stock's monthly return over the preceding year.


Standard Error of the Estimate (SEE)
A measure of absolute fit. One can use this measure to compare the
last portion of this model with another portion of the same dependent
variable.


Standardized Unanticipated Earnings
(SUE) A company's average earnings surprise is compared with analyst
earnings estimates dispersion, which can be used to estimate the
likelihood of earnings surprises.


Stationarity
A distribution of a quantity that does not change over time.


Stationary Time Series
Implies that no trend is observed in the time series. Identified when
the time series has a constant mean and variance.


Step Function
A function defined on an interval so that the interval can be
partitioned into a finite number of subinter vals on each of which
the function is a constant. Also known as a simple function.


Stepwise Regression
A mathematical technique to choose the independent variables that
best describe the behavior of the dependent, in order of improving
description.


Sterling Ratio Method
A measure of risk/return given by:
where:
T = Three-year average annual return

AM = Three-year average maximum annual drawdown. Both Sharpe and
Sterling ratio methods compare returns with variability of returns,
as opposed to risk of loss of original investment.


Stochastic
Literally means random.


Stochastics Oscillator
An overbought/oversold indicator that compares today's price to a
preset window of high and low prices. These data are then transformed
into a range between zero and 100 and then smoothed.


Stock Index Futures
A futures contract traded that uses a market index as the underlying
instrument. Typically, the value of the contract is $500 times the
underlying index. The delivery mechanism is usually cash settlement.


Stop and Reverse (SAR)
A stop that, when hit, is a signal to reverse the current trading
position, i.e., from long to short. Also known as reversal stop .


Stop Loss
The risk management technique in which the trade is liquidated to
halt any further decline in value.


Stop-Running
After a trend, the market will enter into a trading range and have a
tendency to trade to levels where stop-loss orders have been placed.


Stops
Buy stops are orders that are placed at a predetermined price over
the current price of the market. The order becomes a "buy at the
market" order if the market is at or above to the price of the stop
order. Sell stops are orders that are placed with a predetermined
price below the current price. Sell-stop orders become "Sell at the
market" orders if the market trades at or below the price of the stop
order.


Straddle
The purchase or sale of an equivalent number of puts and calls on an
underlying stock with the same exer cise price and expiration date.


Strange Attractor
A balance point between a set of conflicting forces.


Strangle
The purchase or sale of an equivalent number of puts and calls on an
underlying stock with the same expira tion date but a different
exercise price. Usually, the put has a low strike price and the call
has a higher strike price.


Street Name
Stock ownership in which shares are registered to a brokerage or
other financial institution and held.


Strike Price
The price per unit at which the holder of an option may receive or
deliver the underlying unit; also known as the exercise price .


Strips
An option strategy in which an investor buys one call and two puts on
the same underlying security with the same exercise price and
expiration date.


Struck
The price at which an exercised option delivers the underlying
securities.


Student
The pseudonym for Irish chemist W.S. Gosset, who published "The
Probable Error at a Mean" under that name in 1908.


Sum of Squared Residuals (SSR)
Measure related to the R-squared value and the smaller the number,
the higher will be the R-squared, and the better the regression.


SuperDot
NYSE execution technology.


Support

A historical price level at which falling prices have stopped falling
and either moved sideways or reversed direction; usually seen as a
price chart pattern.


Support Line
On a chart, a line drawn indicating the price level at which falling
prices have stopped falling and have moved sideways or reversed
direction.


Swaps
The sale of one security to purchase another with similar features.


Swing Chart
A chart that has a straight line drawn from each price extreme to the
next price extreme based on a set criteria such as percentages or
number of days. For example, percentage price changes of less than 5%
will not be measured in the swing chart.


Swings
The measurement of movement of the price of a tradable between
extreme highs and lows.


Synergistic Market Analysis
Also known as synergistic analysis . An analytical method that merges
technical and fundamental analysis with an emphasis on intermarket
analysis.


Synthetic Securities
Security created by buying and writing a combination of options that
imitate the risk and profit profile of a security.
Glossary ( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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The Traders' Glossary©
of technical terms and topics

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( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


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T-Statistics
The probability distribution used to test the hypothesis that a
random sample of n observations comes from a normal population with a
given mean.


T-Test
A statistical test of significance for a distribution that changes
its shape as N gets smaller; based on a variable t equal to the
difference between the mean of the sample and the mean of the
population divided by a result obtained by dividing the standard
deviation of the sample by the square root of the number of
individuals in the sample.


Tangibles
Cash equivalents of the futures contracts.


Tax-Deferred
In which an investment allows an investor to postpone paying taxes on
money put into the investment until the investor literally takes
possession of the money invested.


Technical Analysis
A form of market analysis that studies demand and supply for
securities and commodities based on trading volume and price studies.
Using charts and modeling techniques, technicians attempt to identify
price trends in a market.


Telegrapher's Equation
A variation of the Diffusion Equation that describes minor
differences in the drunkard's walk, in which the random decision
controls the change in direction rather than the direction itself.


Term Structure
Also known as yield curve. The slope of the term structure is the
yield on long-term government bonds minus the yield on short-term
instruments such as Treasury bills.


Theta
The measurement of the time decay of a position.


Thrust
A comparison between the price difference of successively lower pivot
bottoms or higher pivot tops. For example, a reduction in the
difference between pivot bottoms shows loss of momentum; an increase
in the difference shows increased momentum.


Tick
The minimum fluctuation of a tradable. For example, bonds trade in
32nds, while most stocks trade in eighths.


Tick Indicator
The number of stocks whose last trade was an uptick or a downtick.


Time Domain
Variation of a time series is accounted for by an autocorrelation
function and other time series.


Time Series
A collection of observations made sequentially in time and indexed by
time.


Time Value
The difference between the premium paid for an option and the
intrinsic value. As the option approaches expiration, the time value
erodes, eventually to zero.


TPO
Time-Price Opportunity; a price that occurs during designated half-
hour periods of trading; a price-time relationship developed for the
Chicago Board of Trade's Market Profile and Liquidity Data Bank
reports.


Tradable
Trading instrument.


Trade Facilitation
Liquidity.


Trading Bands
Lines plotted in and around the price structure to form an envelope,
answering whether prices are high or low on a relative basis and
forewarning whether to buy or sell by using indicators to confirm
price action.


Trading Range

The difference between the high and low prices traded during a period
of time; in commodities, the high/low price limit established by the
exchange for a specific commodity for any one day's trading.


Trailing Stop
A stop-loss order that follows the prevailing price trend.


Transfer Agent
Financial institution that manages ownership records of company stock.


Transfer Function
The mathematical relationship between the output of a control system
and its input for a linear system, it is the Laplace transform of the
output divided by the Laplace transform of the input under conditions
of zero initial energy.


Transfer Response
Refers to the shape of the wave coming out of a filter in comparison
to the shape going into it.


Transform
A process to change or convert. For example, a simple moving average
is a filter to reduce noise; the moving average is the transform
function.


Trend
The general drift, tendency or bent of a set of statistical data as
related to time.


Trend Channel

A parallel probable price range centered about the most likely price
line. Historically, this term has been used to denote the area
between the base trendline and the reaction trendline defined by
price moves against the prevailing trend.


Trend Day
A day in which the price of a futures contract moves consistently
away from the opening range and does not return to the opening range
prior to the close.


Trend-Following
Moving in the direction of the prevailing price movement.


Trending Market
Price moves in a single direction, generally closing at an extreme
for the day.


Trendless
Price movement that vacillates to the degree that a clear trend
cannot be identified.


Trendline

A line drawn that connects either a series of highs or lows in a
trend. The trendline can represent either support as in an uptrend
line or resistance as in a downtrend line. Consolidations are marked
by horizontal trendlines.


Triangle
A pattern that exhibits a series of narrower price fluctuations over
time; top and bottom boundaries need not be of equal length.


Triangular Moving Average
A moving average in which each day's data are multiplied by a weight
that increases in value at steady increments to a peak value and then
declines to zero at equivalent increments. The sum of the weighted
daily data is divided by the number of variables.


TRIN
See Arms Index Trix-The one-period difference of the triple
exponential smoothing operating on the log of price.


True Range
The largest of the following: Today's high minus today's low, today's
high minus yesterday's close, today's low minus yesterday's close.


True Strength Index
A momentum indicator developed by William Blau that double-smoothes
the ratio of the market momentum to the absolute value of the market
momentum.

where:
Mtm = one-day change in closing price.
|Mtm| = absolute value of Mtm.
Er = exponential smoothed moving average of r days.
Es = exponential smoothed moving average of s days.


Tulip Sector
A sector that is the intense focus of speculators at the moment.


Turning Point
The approximate time at which there is a change in trend.


Tweezers Bottoms and Tops
Candlestick formations. Both candles must have identical highs and
lows. Significant when found at contract highs or lows, and can
indicate a breakout.


Uncovered Option
The buy or sale of an option without a position in the underlying
futures contract; also known as a naked option.


Underlying Instrument
A trading instrument subject to purchase upon exercise.


Underlying Security
In options, a stock subject to purchase upon exercise of the option.


Uniform Gifts to Minors Acts
A law that allows minors to own property without the use of a trust.


Univariate
Involving only one variable.


Upthrust
Occurs when price moves above a pivot top and a widespread reversal
ensues as follows: a) two previous closes are reversed, b) close is
below pivot top, c) close is below opening and mid-range, d) daily
price range is greater than the previous day's range.


Value Area
The price range on the CBOT Market Profile in which approximately 70%
of the day's trades occur.


Value at Risk (VaR)
A measure of exposure within a given portfolio, which attempts to
estimate how much the portfolio would be expected to lose, given the
recent behavior of the securities contained therein.


Value Averaging
In which the average is taken of a series of values.


Value-Weighted Index
A market average such as Standard & Poor's 500 Index that takes into
account the market value of each security rather than calculating a
straight price average.


Variable-Length Moving Average
A moving average where the number of periods selected for smoothing
is based on a volatility measurement of price. Typically, the
standard deviation of price is used to measure price volatility. The
more volatile the price is, the shorter the number of periods used is
for smoothing.


Vega
The amount by which the price of an option changes when the
volatility changes.


Vertical Spread
A stock option spread based on simultaneous purchase and sale of
options on the same underlying stock with the same expiration months
but different strike prices.


Vesting
The rights that an employee gains for working at a firm for a
specific length of time.


Volatility
A measure of a stock's tendency to move up and down in price, based
on its daily price history over the latest 12 months.


Volume
The shares that are traded for a given market or tradable within a
specified time period.


Volume Price Trend (VPT)
In which a running sum is maintained when a day's total volume is
added if the market closes positive or the day's total volume is
subtracted if the market closes lower. See On-balance volume.


W Formation
A double-bottom formation.


Warrant
A company-issued certificate that represents an option to buy stock
shares at a given time.


Wasting
A term depicting how an option's value decreases over time; as each
day after acquisition passes a portion of the option's time value is
lost or wasted.


Wave
In Elliott wave theory, a sustained move by a market's price in one
direction as determined by the reversal points that initiated and
terminated it.


Wave Cycle
An impulse wave followed by a correction wave, the impulse wave being
made up of five smaller, numbered waves of alternating direction
designated 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, and the correction wave being composed
of three smaller alternating waves designated a, b, and c.


Wedge
A pattern in which two converging lines connect a group of price
peaks and troughs.


Weighted Average Purchase Price
Multiply each purchase order bought by the associated purchase price,
add them together and divide the total by the number of blocks. The
result is the weighted average purchase price.


Weighted Industry Index
An index where the importance of each stock is related to its market
capitalization.


Weighted Moving Average (WMA)
A moving average that puts more weight on recent prices. A three-day
weighted moving average would add a multiple of 1 to the first date,
2 to the second date and 3 to the third date.


Whiplash
Alternating buy and sell signals that result in losses.


Whipsaw
Losing money on both sides of a price swing.


Wildcards
Characters in a quote symbol or Dos file name that indicates an
undefined, but categorized, value.


Williams' %R
Overbought and oversold indicator that is used to determine market
entry and exit points.


Window
Set period of time such as a lookback period for market indicator in
question.


Wizard
A preprogrammed step-by-step procedure to aid the user in
accomplishing a specific task.


Yates's Correction
When a small amount of data is available for testing, the chi-square
formula is adjusted to account for the small sample base.


Zero-Coupon Government Bonds
Government bonds that are purchased at a deep discount and pay no
cash dividend, unlike regular bonds.


Zeta
The percentage change in an options price per 1% change in implied
volatility.


Zigzag
In a bull market, an Elliott three-wave pattern that subdivides into
a 5-3-5 pattern with the top of wave B noticeably lower than the
start of wave A. In a bear market, this pattern will be inverted.
Glossary ( A-C )( D-F )( G-J )( K-M )( N-S )( T-Z )


----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------





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