A sustained upward movement in the price of a security or market, often following a decline.
Describes an asset that trades between a defined high and low price over a period, without a clear trend.
A notification system that taps you on the shoulder the moment your trade setup is detected — so you act fast and never miss out.
The continuous automated process of searching financial instruments for certain conditions or patterns as new market data arrives. On HAMMER Pro, real-time scanning lets traders set custom parameters or scripted logic to identify trading opportunities immediately as market conditions change. Example: Scanning for stocks exhibiting a “death cross” or for intraday breakouts. Customisation: HAMMER Pro supports both built-in and user-coded scans using C# for highly tailored strategies.
The profit or loss on a completed trade. This means a position has been initiated and then closed. It also includes any and all fees and commissions associated with the transaction.
Adjusting the proportions of assets in a portfolio to maintain desired risk/reward profiles or asset allocations.
Example: Selling appreciated assets and buying underweighted ones.
An amount paid to the borrower of easy-to-borrow stocks as an incentive to borrow.
A substantial slip in economic output that impacts the broad economy and lasts for at least a few months. While a technical recession is defined as 2 consecutive quarters of real GDP declines, it is possible to experience two consecutive shallow declines in real GDP without being in recession.
A momentum oscillator used in technical analysis to measure the speed and change of price movements.
Scale: 0–100
An individual investor who buys and sells securities for personal accounts, not on behalf of an organization.
A performance metric used to evaluate the efficiency of an investment.
Formula: (Profit / Cost) × 100
A chart pattern indicating a potential change in trend direction.
Examples: Head and Shoulders, Double Top, Double Bottom
The set of strategies and tools used to limit losses and protect trading capital. This can involve setting stop-loss orders, position sizing, portfolio diversification, and monitoring real-time risk metrics. On HAMMER Pro, traders can use the built-in Risk Terminal to monitor and optimise risk in real time across multiple accounts.
Compares the potential reward of a trade to the potential loss.
Ideal: Traders often aim for at least 2:1.
Example: Risking $100 to potentially gain $200 = 2:1.
In forex, it's the interest paid or earned for holding a position overnight. In futures, it means moving from a near-term contract to a longer-term one before expiry.
A complete trade cycle, including both opening and closing of a position.
Example: Buy 100 shares → Sell 100 shares = 1 round trip.
A warning signal where the price and the Relative Strength Index (RSI) disagree — often a clue that a reversal is near.