Across
- A mutual fund involving speculative investing in stocks and options.
- A securities market characterized thus based on declining prices.
- The degree by which the delta changes with respect to changes in the underlying instrument’s price.
- 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.
- 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.
- The price action of a security or market average where it has declined two times to the same approximate level, indicating the existence of a support level and a possibility that the down ward trend has ended.
- Optimistic decision-making that identifies the decision alternative with the best possible outcomes.
- The percentage change in an options price per 1% change in implied volatility.
- A consistent and predictable change in market activity that occurs from consistent and predictable events.
- To pass beyond or over a specific targeted level.
- Descriptive measure of how flat or pointed a distribution is.
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Down
- The reduction in account equity as a result of a trade or series of trades.
- A mutual fund that replicates the behavior of a given index.
- A company that invests money of its shareholders in a variety of areas, usually stocks.
- Accounting method in which an asset’s cost is spread out.
- A value on a scale of one hundred that indicates the percent of a distribution that is equal to or below it.
- A trading range market or a price region that is non-trending.
- Large transactions of a particular stock sold as a unit.
- The standard deviation of the unexplained portion of the monthly return.
- 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.
- 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.
- The market in which dealers trade riskless, short-term securities such as certificates of deposit and Treasury bills.
- 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.
- Order filled immediately by hand signal on the trading floor.
- The measurement of movement of the price of a tradable between extreme highs and lows.
- Alternating buy and sell signals that result in losses.
- NYSE execution technology.
- A company-issued certificate that represents an option to buy stock shares at a given time.
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