Trading Glossary
Every trading term, finally in your language.
102 terms explained twice: precisely in English, and warmly in Roman Urdu. Written by the P4 Provider desk — the same definitions we hold students to in the Trading Mentorship Program.
A
B
Backtesting
Testing a strategy against historical price data to see how it would have performed — evidence before capital.
Bid & Ask
The two prices every market quotes: the bid is where you can sell, the ask is where you can buy — the gap between them is the spread.
Bitcoin (BTC)
The first and largest cryptocurrency — a fixed-supply digital asset whose price leads and defines the entire crypto market.
Break of Structure (BOS)
Price closing beyond the previous swing in the trend's direction — structural confirmation that the trend continues.
Breakeven (BE)
Moving your stop loss to the entry price once a trade is in profit, so the worst remaining outcome is roughly zero.
Breakout
Price escaping a defined level or range — genuine when backed by displacement and volume, a trap when it is a sweep.
Broker
The regulated firm that connects your orders to the market, holds your funds, and provides the platform, leverage and pricing you trade on.
Bull & Bear Market
A bull market is a sustained period of rising prices and optimism; a bear market is sustained decline — each demands a different playbook.
C
Candlestick
A chart unit showing open, high, low and close for one period — the body shows the result, the wicks show the battle.
Change of Character (CHoCH)
The first structural break against the trend — the earliest chart evidence that a reversal may be starting.
Commission
The fixed fee some brokers charge per trade, usually alongside a raw spread — the visible half of your trading costs.
Confluence
Multiple independent reasons pointing to the same trade — the difference between a setup and a guess.
Cross & Exotic Pairs
Crosses are major-currency pairs without the US dollar (EUR/GBP); exotics pair a major with an emerging-market currency (USD/PKR).
Cryptocurrency
Digital assets secured by cryptography and recorded on blockchains — a young, 24/7, highly volatile market led by Bitcoin.
Currency Pair
Two currencies quoted against each other, like EUR/USD — you always buy one and sell the other at the same time.
D
Day Trading
Opening and closing all positions within the same day — no overnight risk, decisions made on intraday structure.
Demo Account
A practice account with virtual money and live prices — the right place to learn mechanics, the wrong place to stay forever.
Discipline in Trading
Executing your written rules on every trade, especially when emotions argue otherwise — the trait that compounds an edge.
Displacement
A sudden, one-sided burst of price with large candles and imbalances — the market showing genuine institutional intent.
Divergence
Price making a new extreme while an oscillator refuses to confirm it — momentum quietly leaving the move.
Doji
A candle that opens and closes at nearly the same price — indecision, and a warning that the current push is losing force.
Drawdown
The decline from an account's peak to its lowest point after — the true measure of how much pain a strategy inflicts.
E
ECN Broker
A broker that routes your orders directly into a network of liquidity providers, charging commission instead of marking up the spread.
Economic Calendar
The schedule of upcoming economic releases and central-bank events — the trader's map of when markets are likely to move violently.
Engulfing Candle
A candle whose body swallows the previous candle's body — a one-bar shift in control from one side to the other.
Equity (Account)
Your account's live value: balance plus the floating profit or loss of open trades — the number that actually matters.
Expectancy
The average amount a strategy earns or loses per trade over many trades — the single number that says if an edge exists.
F
Fair Value Gap (FVG)
A three-candle imbalance where price moved so fast it left untraded space — a magnet for future price.
Fibonacci Retracement
Horizontal levels at set percentages of a price swing — a map of where pullbacks commonly pause, not a magic formula.
FOMO (Fear of Missing Out)
The anxiety of watching a move happen without you — the emotion behind chasing entries at the worst possible prices.
Forex Market
The global, decentralised market where currencies are exchanged — over $7 trillion traded daily, 24 hours a day, five days a week.
Fundamental Analysis
Judging what a currency or asset should be worth from economic forces — interest rates, inflation, growth and central-bank policy.
Funding Rate
The periodic payment between longs and shorts on perpetual futures that keeps the contract price tied to the spot price.
Futures Trading
Trading contracts on an asset's price rather than the asset itself — leveraged, able to profit in both directions, and able to liquidate you.
G
H
I
K
L
Leverage
Borrowed buying power from your broker that multiplies both profits and losses — a tool, not an edge.
Limit Order
An order that executes only at your chosen price or better — you get price control, the market decides if it fills.
Liquidation (Crypto Futures)
The forced closure of a leveraged position when losses consume its margin — the exchange closes you out, and the position cannot recover.
Liquidity
The resting orders — mostly stop losses — that big players need to fill their positions.
Liquidity Sweep
A quick push through an obvious high or low that triggers resting stops, then reverses — collection, not continuation.
London Session
The highest-volume forex session, roughly 12:00-21:00 PKT — where the day's real direction is usually decided.
Lot Size
The standardised quantity of a forex trade: standard (100,000 units), mini (10,000) or micro (1,000).
M
Major Pairs
The most-traded currency pairs, all involving the US dollar — EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY and their peers.
Margin
The portion of your balance the broker locks as collateral to keep a leveraged position open — a deposit, not a fee.
Margin Call
The broker's warning that your equity has fallen too close to your locked margin — the last stop before forced liquidation.
Market Order
An order that executes immediately at the best available price — you get speed, the market chooses the exact fill.
Market Structure
The pattern of highs and lows that defines trend: higher highs and higher lows up, lower lows down.
Moving Average
A line plotting the average closing price over N periods — a lagging but honest summary of trend direction.
Multi-Timeframe Analysis
Reading higher timeframes for direction and zones, then dropping to lower timeframes for precise, confirmed entries.
N
O
P
Pending Order
Any order placed in advance to trigger at a future price — limits, stops, buy stops and sell stops all belong here.
Pin Bar
A candle with a long wick and small body — price pierced a level, was firmly rejected, and closed back away from it.
Pip
The smallest standard unit of price movement in forex — 0.0001 on most pairs, 0.01 on JPY pairs.
Position Sizing
Calculating exactly how many lots to trade so a stopped-out trade loses only your planned percentage.
Position Trading
The longest-horizon style: holding for weeks to months to ride major trends, guided by fundamentals and weekly charts.
Premium & Discount
Splitting a price range at its midpoint: buy in the cheap lower half (discount), sell in the expensive upper half (premium).
Price Action
Trading from the raw movement of price — structure, candles and levels — without relying on lagging indicators.
Prop Firm (Funded Account)
A company that lets traders trade its capital after passing an evaluation, splitting profits — skill required, personal capital not.
Pullback / Retracement
A temporary move against the trend that offers a better price to join it — the professional's preferred entry.
R
R-Multiple
Trade results measured in units of initial risk: a +3R trade made three times what it risked, regardless of account size.
Range / Consolidation
A sideways market bounded by support and resistance — where liquidity builds before the next directional move.
Revenge Trading
Jumping back into the market right after a loss to win the money back — trading against your own emotions, not the market.
Reversal
The end of one trend and the birth of the opposite one — confirmed by structure, not by feelings about price being too high.
Risk : Reward Ratio
How much a trade can pay versus what it risks — at 1:3, one win covers three losses.
Risk Management
The rules that control how much you can lose — per trade, per day, per account — so no outcome can take you out of the game.
RSI (Relative Strength Index)
A 0-100 momentum oscillator comparing recent gains to losses — most valuable for divergence, not for its 70/30 lines.
S
Scalping
Very short-term trading that targets small moves in minutes — high frequency, high precision, and unforgiving of costs.
Slippage
The difference between the price you requested and the price you actually got — small in quiet markets, brutal around news.
Smart Money
The institutional players whose size forces them to leave readable footprints on every chart.
Spot Trading
Buying or selling the actual asset for immediate settlement — you own what you buy, with no leverage, expiry or liquidation risk.
Spread
The gap between the bid and ask price — the cost you pay the moment any trade opens.
Stablecoin
A cryptocurrency designed to hold a fixed value, usually $1, by being backed by reserves — the cash of the crypto market.
Stop Loss
A pre-set order that closes a losing trade automatically — the only real insurance in trading.
Supply & Demand Zone
Price areas where a sharp move began — zones of unfilled institutional orders that often produce a reaction on return.
Support & Resistance
Horizontal levels where price has repeatedly stalled — support below as a floor, resistance above as a ceiling.
Swap / Rollover
The interest paid or earned for holding a leveraged position overnight, based on the interest-rate gap between the two currencies.
Swing High & Swing Low
The local peaks and troughs of price — the reference points from which all market structure is read.
Swing Trading
Holding trades for days to weeks to capture a full price swing — the style that fits around a job and rewards patience.
T
Take Profit
A pre-set order that banks your gains automatically at a target you chose before entering.
Technical Analysis
Reading price charts — structure, levels, patterns and indicators — on the premise that price reflects all known information and behaviour repeats.
Timeframe
The period each candle represents, from one minute to one month — same market, very different stories.
Trading Journal
A record of every trade — setup, execution, result and emotional state — that turns experience into usable data.
Trading Plan
A written document defining what you trade, when, why, and with how much risk — the difference between a business and a hobby.
Trading Psychology
The management of fear, greed and discipline under financial uncertainty — the layer where most strategies actually fail.
Trading Session
The regional blocks of the 24-hour forex day — Asian, London and New York — each with its own volume, volatility and behaviour.
Trailing Stop
A stop loss that follows price as the trade moves in your favour, locking in profit while leaving room to run.
Trend
The market's sustained direction — higher highs and higher lows up, lower lows and lower highs down.
U
V
Volatility
How much and how fast price moves — the raw material of both opportunity and risk, and it changes with session and news.
Volume
The amount of trading activity behind each candle — the conviction gauge that separates real moves from empty ones.
Volume Spread Analysis (VSA)
Reading each candle's volume against its range to detect what professional money is doing behind the price.