Orders and Execution Instructions

Buyers and sellers communicate with the brokers, exchanges, and dealers that arrange their trades by issuing orders. All orders specify what instrument to trade, how much to trade, and whether to buy or sell. Most orders also have other instructions attached to them. These additional instructions may include execution instructions, validity instructions, and clearing instructions. Execution…

Leveraged Positions

The borrowed money is called the margin loan, and they are said to buy on margin. The interest rate that the buyers pay for their margin loan is called the call money rate. The initial margin requirement is the minimum fraction of the purchase price that must be trader’s equity. The relation between risk and…

Positions and Short Positions

People generally solve their financial and risk management problems by taking positions in various assets or contracts. A position in an asset is the quantity of the instrument that an entity owes or owns. A portfolio consists of a set of positions. People have long positions when they own assets or contracts. People have short…

Secruitisers, Depository Instituations and Insurance Companies

The process of buying assets, placing them in a pool, and then selling securities that represent ownership of the pool is called securitisation. The corporation or trust is called a special purpose vehicle (SPV) or, alternatively, a special purpose entity (SPE). Depository Institutions and Other Financial Corporations Depository institutions include commercial banks, savings and loan…

Financial Intermediaries

Financial intermediaries help entities achieve their financial goals. These intermediaries include commercial, mortgage, and investment banks; credit unions, credit card companies, and various other finance corporations; brokers and exchanges; dealers and arbitrageurs; clearinghouses and depositories; mutual funds and hedge funds; and insurance companies. The services and products that financial intermediaries provide allow their clients to…

Contracts

A contract is an agreement among traders to do something in the future. Contracts include forward, futures, swap, option, and insurance contracts. The values of most contracts depend on the value of an underlying asset.  The underlying asset may be a commodity, a security, an index representing the values of other instruments, a currency pair or…

Currencies, Commodities, and Real Assets

Currencies are monies issued by national monetary authorities. Currencies trade in foreign exchange markets. In spot currency transactions, one currency is immediately or almost immediately exchanged for another. The rate of exchange is called the spot exchange rate. Retail currency trades most commonly take place through commercial banks when their customers exchange currencies at a…