FundedNext CFDs Glossary
Explore our detailed forex trading glossary designed to help you understand key terms and concepts with ease.
A
- Account Balance
Account balance refers to the amount of funds currently available in a trader’s account.
- Asset Class
An asset class is a group of similar financial instruments you can trade, such as forex, commodities, indices, cryptocurrencies, stocks, or options.
- Ask Price
In CFDs (Contract for Difference) trading, the ask price is the price at which traders can buy an asset.
- Arbitrage
Arbitrage trading involves buying an asset at a lower price on one platform and selling it almost simultaneously at a higher price on another.
- Automated Trading
Automated trading, also called auto trading or algorithmic trading is the process of executing trades based on pre-programmed rules and conditions.
B
- Base Currency
The base currency is the first currency listed in a forex pair. It represents the fixed unit of value that traders are buying or selling.
- Bear Market
A bear market is a prolonged period when the prices of financial instruments, such as Forex pairs, indices, or other CFDs fall significantly from recent highs.
- Bull Market
A bull market is a period when the price of assets, such as those available through CFDs, continues to rise over time.
- Bid Price
In CFDs trading, the bid price is the highest price a buyer is willing to pay for an asset at any given time.
- Broker
A broker is an individual or firm that acts as a middleman, allowing you to place trades in the financial markets.
C
- CFD (Contract for Difference)
A CFD is a financial agreement that allows you to speculate on the price movement of assets, such as stocks, currencies, indices, cryptos, or commodities, without owning them.
- Currency Pair
A currency pair in trading shows the price of one currency compared to another.
- Cross-Currency Pair
A cross currency pair is any currency pair that does not include the U.S. Dollar (USD).
- Close Price
Closing price (or close price) is the last price of a CFDs pair when a trading period ends.
- Commission
Commission (or forex commission, forex trading commission) is like a small service charge you pay to the forex broker every time you open or close a trade.
D
- Day Trading
Day trading is a short-term trading style where financial instruments like forex pairs are bought and sold within the same day to capture intraday price movements before the market closes.
- Demo Account
A demo account is a simulated trading account that lets you practice trading in real market conditions using virtual funds, helping you learn, test strategies, and build confidence without risk.
- Down Trend
A downtrend is a market pattern where an asset’s price consistently moves lower, forming a sequence of lower highs and lower lows, signaling seller dominance and continued downward momentum.
- Dealer
A dealer is a person or firm that trades currencies directly for its own account, acting as the principal buyer or seller rather than matching other traders.
- Deficit
In CFD trading, a deficit refers to when your account balance drops below your starting amount, showing how much you need to recover to return to your initial balance.
E
- Entry Price
The entry price is the specific market level where a trader opens a buy or sell position, marking the starting point from which profit or loss is measured.
- Equity
Equity is the real-time value of your trading account, combining your balance with current open trade profits or losses, showing your account’s actual worth at any given moment.
- Exchange Rate
The exchange rate, also called the foreign exchange or FX rate, is the value showing how much one currency is worth in terms of another, like 1 EUR = 1.10 USD.
- Economic Indicator
An economic indicator is a data point that measures a country's economic health, showing trends like growth, employment, or inflation, and helping traders predict currency strength or weakness.
- Exposure
Exposure refers to the total value of your open positions, showing how much your capital is at risk if the market moves against you.
F
- Forex
Forex, short for foreign exchange, is a global 24-hour marketplace where banks, businesses, and individuals buy and sell currencies, determining their relative values through continuous international trading.
- Floating Loss
Floating loss is the unrealized loss on an open trade that changes with market movement and becomes final only when the position is closed, reflecting potential current loss.
- Fundamental Analysis
Fundamental analysis in forex studies a country’s economic and political factors like interest rates, inflation, and growth to predict whether its currency will strengthen or weaken against others.
- Funded Account
A funded account is a trading account provided by a prop firm that lets skilled traders use the firm’s capital after proving risk management ability, allowing access to larger capital with limited personal risk.
- FOMC
The FOMC, or Federal Open Market Committee, is part of the U.S. Federal Reserve that sets interest rates and controls money supply to guide the U.S. and global economy.
G
- Gap
A Gap in trading is a price jump on a chart where no trades occur between levels, showing a sudden move from one price to another without continuous trading activity.
- Going Long
Going long means buying a financial instrument, like a currency pair, with the expectation that its price will rise so you can sell later at a higher price for profit.
- Going Short
Going short means selling an asset first, expecting its price to drop, then buying it back later at a lower price to keep the difference as profit, the opposite of going long.
- GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the total market value of all goods and services produced within a country over a specific period, reflecting its overall economic size and performance.
- GMT (Greenwich Mean Time)
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is the time at the Prime Meridian in London, serving as a global reference for coordinating trading sessions and market activity across different time zones.
H
- Hedging
Hedging is a risk management strategy where a trader opens an opposite-position trade to offset potential losses from an existing trade, helping stabilize overall exposure during market fluctuations.
- High-Frequency Trading (HFT)
High-Frequency Trading (HFT) is an algorithmic strategy that executes thousands of rapid trades within milliseconds to capture tiny, short-term price changes using advanced technology and ultra-fast data connections.
I
- Interest Rate
An interest rate is the percentage charged for borrowing or earned for saving money, set by central banks, influencing currency value, investor behavior, and overall market movement in forex and CFDs.
- Inflation
Inflation is the rate at which the prices of goods and services rise over time, reducing the purchasing power of money and influencing the value of currencies in trading.
- Initial Margin
Initial margin is the minimum upfront amount a trader must deposit with a broker to open a position, serving as a security buffer to cover potential trading losses.
- Intraday Trading
Intraday trading refers to buying and selling financial assets within the same trading day to capture short-term price movements, without holding any positions overnight for long-term gains.
- Inactivity period
The inactivity period in trading refers to the specific duration when a trader’s account shows no activity such as buying, selling, or position changes and may be marked inactive by the broker.
J
- Japanese Candlestick
A Japanese candlestick is a chart shape showing a set period’s open, high, low, and close prices, visually revealing whether price movement was bullish or bearish.
- Jobless Claims
Jobless claims are official reports showing how many people have applied for unemployment benefits, helping measure the job market’s strength and indicating trends in employment and economic health.
L
- Leverage
Leverage allows traders to control larger market positions with less capital by borrowing funds from their broker, amplifying both potential gains and losses in proportion to the leverage used.
- Liquidity
Liquidity in trading means how quickly and easily an asset can be bought or sold without major price changes, reflecting market activity and the ease of entering or exiting positions.
- Limit Order
A limit order is an instruction to buy or sell an asset only at a set price or better, giving traders control over their entry or exit points without constant market monitoring.
- Long Position
A long position means buying an asset with the expectation that its price will rise, allowing the trader to sell later at a higher price and make a profit.
- Lot Size
A lot size represents the total units of a currency you control in a trade, determining how big or small your position is, such as standard, mini, micro, or nano.
M
- Margin
Margin in trading is the portion of funds a trader must set aside as collateral to open and maintain positions, ensuring they can cover potential losses on active trades.
- Margin Call
A margin call is a warning that your account lacks sufficient funds to maintain open positions, requiring you to deposit more money or close trades to meet margin requirements.
- Market Order
A market order is an instruction to buy or sell a currency pair instantly at the current market price, ensuring immediate trade execution at the best available rate.
- Market Maker
A market maker is a broker or institution that provides both buy and sell prices, ensuring constant liquidity so trades execute instantly and markets stay active and efficient.
- Meta Trader 4
MetaTrader 4 (MT4) is a popular online trading platform that lets traders access global markets, analyze charts, and execute CFD trades on currencies, commodities, indices, and cryptos.
N
- News Trading
News trading is a strategy where traders make quick decisions based on major economic or political news that can cause sharp price movements in currencies, stocks, or commodities.
- NFP (Non-Farm Payrolls)
The NFP (Non-Farm Payrolls) report is a monthly US jobs report showing how many positions were added or lost, excluding farm, government, and private household workers.
- Net Position
Net position shows the difference between total buy and sell trades, indicating whether a trader holds more long (buy) or short (sell) positions in a given asset.
O
- Open Position
An open position is an active trade you’ve entered but haven’t closed yet, meaning no profit or loss is realized until you exit the position.
- Order
An order is an instruction you place on a trading platform to buy or sell an asset under specific conditions, helping you control when and how trades are executed.
- Order Book
An order book is a real-time record of all buy and sell orders for a trading pair, showing the prices and quantities traders are willing to buy or sell at.
P
- PIP (Percentage in Point)
A pip, or “Percentage in Point,” is the smallest price change in a forex pair, usually 0.0001 for most pairs and 0.01 for those involving the Japanese Yen.
- Pipette
A pipette is one-tenth of a pip, used to measure smaller, more precise price movements in forex trading, giving traders a clearer view of market fluctuations on modern platforms.
- P&L (Profit and Loss)
P&L (Profit and Loss) shows the result of a trade, indicating whether a trader gained or lost value based on the difference between entry and exit prices, adjusted for trade size.
Q
- Quote Currency
The quote (or counter) currency is the second currency in a forex pair, showing how much of it is required to equal one unit of the base currency, like USD in EURUSD.
- Quote Time
Quote time is the exact timestamp showing when a trading price was offered in the market, helping traders verify its accuracy as prices change throughout the 24-hour trading period.
R
- Risk Management
Risk management in trading means using rules and tools to limit losses, protect your capital, and ensure one bad trade doesn’t wipe out your account while aiming for steady gains.
- Risk-to-Reward Ratio
The risk-to-reward ratio measures how much a trader risks compared to potential gain in a trade, helping assess whether the potential reward justifies the possible loss.
S
- Spread
A spread is the small difference between an asset’s buy (ask) and sell (bid) prices, showing the cost of opening a trade and how brokers make money.
- Stop Loss
A stop loss is a preset order that automatically closes your trade when the price moves against you, helping limit losses and protect your account through effective risk management.
T
- Take Profit
A take profit (TP) is an automated order that closes a trade once the market hits your target price, helping you secure gains without constantly monitoring the charts.
- Technical Analysis
Technical analysis is a rules-based study of price charts, patterns, and indicators used to plan precise entries, exits, and risk levels by analyzing past price behavior to guide future trades.
U
- Unrealized P&L
Unrealized P&L (floating P&L) is the current profit or loss on open CFD positions that changes with price movements and becomes realized only when the trade is closed.
- Up trend
An uptrend is when a market’s price consistently moves higher over time, forming higher highs and higher lows, showing strong buyer control and overall upward momentum.
V
- Volume
Trading volume measures how much of an asset is traded over time, showing market activity. Higher volume signals stronger moves and participation, while lower volume suggests quieter, thinner markets.
- Volatility
Volatility measures how fast and how far prices move over time; larger, quicker swings mean higher volatility, while smaller, slower moves mean lower volatility, showing market “jumpiness.”
W
- Withdrawal
A withdrawal is the process of transferring funds from your trading account to your own bank, wallet, or card, using approved methods, effectively the reverse of a deposit.
- Wallet
A wallet is your trading account’s central hub, securely holding funds before they’re moved to a CFD account and receiving withdrawals while enabling quick transfers, transparency, and easy multi-currency management.
X
- XAU/USD (Gold)
XAUUSD represents the price of gold quoted in US dollars, showing how many dollars are needed to buy one troy ounce of gold, a key CFD and safe-haven trading instrument.
- XAG/USD (Silver)
XAGUSD represents Silver priced in US Dollars, showing how many USD are needed to buy one ounce of Silver. It reflects Silver’s value relative to the Dollar’s strength and market demand.
Y
- Yard
In forex, a “yard” means one billion units of currency, used by institutional traders to clearly indicate billion-sized transactions and avoid confusion between “million” and “billion.”
- Yen Crosses
Yen Crosses are forex pairs that exclude USD and use the Japanese Yen (JPY) as the quote currency, like EURJPY or GBPJPY, reflecting global risk sentiment and volatility.