Aspiring traders will often be familiar
with the concept of buying to initiate a trade. After all, since many of us are
children we are taught the basic premise of ‘buying low, and selling high.’
In financial markets, jargon often plays a key role. Jargon
helps show familiarity and comfort with a particular subject matter, and
nowhere is this jargon more apparent than when discussing the ‘position,’ of a
trade.
When a trader is buying with the prospect of closing
the trade at a higher price later, the trader is said to be going ‘Long,’ in
the trade. The following graphic will illustrate the dynamic of a long
position:
While this premise may seem easy enough,
the next may be slightly more unconventional to new traders.
The concept of selling something that isn’t already
owned may prove as a confusing concept, but in their ever-evolving pragmatism
traders created a mannerism for doing so.
When a trader is going ‘Short,’ in a trade, they are
selling with the goal of buying back (to cover the trade) at a lower price. The
difference between the initial selling price, and the price at which the trade
was ‘covered,’ is the traders profit to keep less any fees, commissions, or
selling expenses. The chart below illustrates a ‘Short,’
position.
It’s important to note the interesting
distinction between currencies and other markets. Because currencies are quoted
with two sides (each quote references 2 different currencies taking opposing
positions), each trade offers the trader long and short exposure in varying currencies.
For example, a trader going short EUR/AUD would be
selling Euro’s and going long Australian Dollars. If, however, the trader went
long the currency pair – they would be buying Euro’s and selling Australian
Dollars.
OPEN A FOREX TRADING ACCOUNT AND WITHDRAW YOUR PROFIT INTO YOUR NIGERIAN BANK ACCOUNT (NAIRA ACCOUNT).
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