Trading Glossary
Plain-language definitions of forex, CFD, and trading terms, from beginner basics to advanced concepts.
163 terms
Forex Basics17
Forex BasicsAsk PriceThe ask (or offer) is the price at which a broker will sell the base currency to you — in other words, the price you pay when you buy (go long) a currency pair.
Forex BasicsBase CurrencyThe base currency is the first currency listed in a pair — the one being bought or sold — and it always equals exactly one unit against the quote currency.
Forex BasicsBid PriceThe bid is the price at which a broker will buy the base currency from you — in other words, the price you receive when you sell (go short) a currency pair.
Forex BasicsCurrency PairA currency pair quotes the value of one currency (the base) against another (the quote), such as EUR/USD, and is the tradable instrument in forex.
Forex BasicsExchange RateAn exchange rate is the price at which one currency can be converted into another, and it is exactly what forex traders speculate on as it rises and falls.
Forex BasicsExotic Currency PairsExotic pairs match a major currency with the currency of a smaller or emerging economy, such as USD/TRY or EUR/ZAR, and tend to have wider spreads and lower liquidity.
Forex BasicsForex (FX)Forex, short for foreign exchange, is the global decentralized market where currencies are traded against each other — the largest and most liquid financial market in the world.
Forex BasicsLot SizeLot size is the standardized quantity of currency units in a forex trade, which scales the pip value — and therefore the risk — of a position.
Forex BasicsMajor Currency PairsThe majors are the most heavily traded currency pairs, all including the US dollar — such as EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, and USD/CHF — and they typically offer the tightest spreads.
Forex BasicsMicro LotA micro lot is 1,000 units of the base currency — one-hundredth of a standard lot — with a pip value of about $0.10, popular with beginners managing small risk.
Forex BasicsMini LotA mini lot is 10,000 units of the base currency — one-tenth of a standard lot — with a pip value of about $1 on most USD-quoted pairs.
Forex BasicsMinor Currency PairsMinor pairs, or crosses, are actively traded currency pairs that do not include the US dollar, such as EUR/GBP or AUD/JPY.
Forex BasicsPipA pip ("percentage in point") is the smallest standard price move in most forex pairs — typically the fourth decimal place (0.0001), or the second decimal place (0.01) for pairs quoted in Japanese yen.
Forex BasicsPip ValuePip value is the monetary worth of a one-pip move for a given position, which depends on the currency pair traded and the lot size used.
Forex BasicsPipetteA pipette, or fractional pip, is one-tenth of a pip — an extra decimal place (a fifth decimal for most pairs, or a third decimal for yen pairs) that many brokers quote for more precise pricing.
Forex BasicsQuote CurrencyThe quote (or counter) currency is the second currency in a pair, and it shows how much of it is needed to buy one unit of the base currency.
Forex BasicsStandard LotA standard lot is 100,000 units of the base currency, giving a pip value of roughly $10 on most USD-quoted pairs.
Instruments10
InstrumentsCFD (Contract for Difference)A CFD is a leveraged derivative that lets a trader speculate on an asset's price movement without owning it, settling the difference between the opening and closing price.
InstrumentsCommodityA commodity is a raw physical good such as gold, oil, or wheat that can be traded via CFDs, futures, or spot markets.
InstrumentsCrypto CFDA crypto CFD lets traders speculate on cryptocurrency prices with leverage and without holding the coins, though it carries high volatility and financing costs.
InstrumentsCryptocurrencyA cryptocurrency is a digital asset secured by cryptography, such as Bitcoin or Ethereum, traded for its price movement often via CFDs at brokers.
InstrumentsFutures ContractA futures contract is a standardized agreement to buy or sell an asset at a set price on a future date, traded on regulated exchanges.
InstrumentsGold Trading (XAU/USD)Gold trading, quoted as XAU/USD, is the buying and selling of gold against the dollar, widely used as an inflation hedge and safe-haven play.
InstrumentsIndices (Stock Indices)Indices track the combined performance of a basket of stocks, such as the S&P 500 or DAX, and are commonly traded as CFDs.
InstrumentsOil Trading (WTI / Brent)Oil trading involves speculating on crude benchmarks such as WTI and Brent, whose prices are driven by supply, demand, and geopolitics.
InstrumentsShare CFD (Stock CFD)A share CFD tracks the price of a single company's stock with leverage, letting traders go long or short without owning the underlying shares.
InstrumentsSpot MarketThe spot market is where instruments are traded for immediate delivery at the current price, as opposed to a future dated contract.
Market Structure & Participants11
Market Structure & ParticipantsBrokerA broker is the firm that gives traders access to the markets, providing a platform, pricing, and execution in exchange for spreads or commissions.
Market Structure & ParticipantsDealing DeskA dealing-desk broker internally handles client orders and may take the opposing side, acting as a market maker rather than routing to the interbank market.
Market Structure & ParticipantsForex Market HoursForex market hours span 24 hours a day, five days a week, as trading rolls continuously across the major global sessions.
Market Structure & ParticipantsLiquidityLiquidity is how easily an asset can be bought or sold without moving its price, with higher liquidity meaning tighter spreads and smoother execution.
Market Structure & ParticipantsLiquidity ProviderA liquidity provider is a bank or large institution that supplies buy and sell quotes to brokers, forming the pricing pool that ECN and STP brokers tap into.
Market Structure & ParticipantsMarket MakerA market maker is a broker or institution that quotes both buy and sell prices and takes the other side of client trades, profiting from the spread.
Market Structure & ParticipantsNo Dealing Desk (NDD)A no-dealing-desk broker passes orders directly to liquidity providers via ECN or STP routing, without taking the other side of client trades.
Market Structure & ParticipantsOrder BookAn order book is the real-time list of outstanding buy and sell orders at each price level, showing where liquidity and market depth sit.
Market Structure & ParticipantsPrice GapA price gap is a sudden jump between one price and the next with no trading in between, common at market opens or around major news.
Market Structure & ParticipantsTrading SessionA trading session is one of the major regional forex windows — Sydney, Tokyo, London, and New York — whose overlaps bring peak liquidity and volatility.
Market Structure & ParticipantsVolatilityVolatility measures how much and how quickly a price fluctuates, defining both the opportunity and the risk in a market.
Order Types & Execution16
Order Types & ExecutionBuy LimitA buy-limit order is a pending order to buy at a price below the current market, used to enter a long position on a pullback to a cheaper level.
Order Types & ExecutionECN (Electronic Communication Network)An ECN broker routes orders directly to a network of liquidity providers, offering raw variable spreads plus a commission and no dealing-desk intervention.
Order Types & ExecutionGood-Till-Cancelled (GTC)A good-till-cancelled order stays active until it is filled or the trader manually cancels it, rather than expiring at the end of the trading day.
Order Types & ExecutionInstant ExecutionInstant execution fills an order at the exact requested price or issues a requote if that price is no longer available, common on dealing-desk accounts.
Order Types & ExecutionLimit OrderA limit order sets a specific price at which to buy or sell, executing only at that price or better, giving price control but no guarantee of a fill.
Order Types & ExecutionMarket ExecutionMarket execution fills an order at the next available market price with no requotes, so the fill price may differ slightly from the requested one.
Order Types & ExecutionMarket OrderA market order is an instruction to buy or sell immediately at the best available current price, prioritizing speed of execution over price certainty.
Order Types & ExecutionOrder ExecutionOrder execution is the process of completing a buy or sell instruction in the market, whose speed and quality directly affect slippage and trading costs.
Order Types & ExecutionPending OrderA pending order is an instruction to open a trade automatically when the price reaches a chosen future level, rather than executing at the current price.
Order Types & ExecutionRequoteA requote occurs when a broker cannot fill an order at the requested price and offers a new price to accept or reject, typical of instant-execution dealing desks.
Order Types & ExecutionSell LimitA sell-limit order is a pending order to sell at a price above the current market, used to enter a short position on a rally to a higher level.
Order Types & ExecutionSlippageSlippage is the difference between the expected price of a trade and the price at which it is actually executed, common in fast or illiquid markets.
Order Types & ExecutionStop OrderA stop order becomes a market order once the price reaches a set trigger level, used to enter breakouts or to close a position via a stop-loss.
Order Types & ExecutionStop-Limit OrderA stop-limit order triggers a limit order once a stop price is hit, combining a trigger level with a price cap to avoid execution at unfavorable prices.
Order Types & ExecutionSTP (Straight-Through Processing)An STP broker passes client orders straight through to its liquidity providers without a dealing desk, profiting from a small spread markup rather than client losses.
Order Types & ExecutionTrailing StopA trailing stop is a stop-loss that automatically follows the price by a set distance as a trade moves in your favor, locking in gains while limiting downside.
Account & Order Concepts11
Account & Order ConceptsAccount BalanceAccount balance is the amount of settled funds in a trading account, excluding the profit or loss of any positions still open.
Account & Order ConceptsContract SizeContract size is the standardized quantity of the underlying asset represented by one lot or contract, which determines the value of each price move.
Account & Order ConceptsDemo AccountA demo account lets traders practice with virtual money on live market prices, ideal for learning a platform and testing strategies risk-free.
Account & Order ConceptsEquityEquity is the real-time value of a trading account including open-position profit or loss, equal to the balance plus any floating P/L.
Account & Order ConceptsFloating Profit/LossFloating (unrealized) profit or loss is the running gain or loss on open positions that changes with the market until the trade is closed.
Account & Order ConceptsIslamic Account (Swap-Free)An Islamic, or swap-free, account complies with Sharia law by charging no overnight interest, replacing swaps with an admin fee where applicable.
Account & Order ConceptsLive AccountA live account is a funded trading account that places real orders with real money, exposing the trader to genuine profit and loss.
Account & Order ConceptsLong PositionA long position is a trade that profits when the price rises, opened by buying the base currency or asset in expectation of appreciation.
Account & Order ConceptsOpen PositionAn open position is an active trade that has been entered but not yet closed, still exposed to market movement and floating profit or loss.
Account & Order ConceptsRealized Profit/LossRealized profit or loss is the locked-in result of a trade once it is closed, which then settles into the account balance.
Account & Order ConceptsShort PositionA short position is a trade that profits when the price falls, opened by selling an asset first with the aim of buying it back cheaper.
Margin & Leverage10
Margin & LeverageFree MarginFree margin is the equity available to open new positions or absorb losses, calculated as account equity minus the margin already used.
Margin & LeverageInitial MarginInitial margin is the deposit required to open a new leveraged position, determined by the instrument's margin requirement and the chosen leverage.
Margin & LeverageLeverageLeverage lets a trader control a position much larger than their deposit by borrowing from the broker, magnifying both potential profits and losses.
Margin & LeverageMaintenance MarginMaintenance margin is the minimum equity that must be kept in an account to hold open positions, below which a margin call or stop-out is triggered.
Margin & LeverageMarginMargin is the deposit a trader must set aside to open and maintain a leveraged position, effectively a good-faith collateral held by the broker.
Margin & LeverageMargin CallA margin call is a broker warning that account equity has fallen too close to the required margin, prompting the trader to add funds or reduce positions.
Margin & LeverageMargin LevelMargin level is the ratio of equity to used margin expressed as a percentage, a key gauge of account health that triggers margin calls and stop-outs when it falls too low.
Margin & LeverageNegative Balance ProtectionNegative balance protection is a broker safeguard that ensures a trader cannot lose more than their account balance, even after extreme market gaps.
Margin & LeverageStop-OutA stop-out is the automatic closing of a trader's positions by the broker when the margin level drops below a set threshold, to prevent the account going negative.
Margin & LeverageUsed MarginUsed margin is the total amount of a trader's funds currently locked up as collateral across all open leveraged positions.
Trading Costs9
Trading CostsCommissionA commission is a fixed fee a broker charges per trade or per lot traded, common on raw-spread and ECN accounts that offer much tighter spreads in exchange for a separate, transparent charge.
Trading CostsFixed SpreadA fixed spread stays constant regardless of changing market conditions, giving traders cost certainty, though it usually starts wider than a comparable variable spread during normal, liquid market hours.
Trading CostsInactivity FeeAn inactivity fee is a periodic charge some brokers apply to a trading account that has had no trading activity for a set period, often several months to a year.
Trading CostsOvernight FinancingOvernight financing is the cost of holding a leveraged CFD or forex position past the daily rollover cut-off, reflecting the funding cost of the borrowed portion of a leveraged trade.
Trading CostsRaw SpreadA raw spread is the near-interbank spread passed on to a trader with little to no broker markup, typically paired with a separate per-lot commission rather than being built into the price.
Trading CostsRolloverRollover is the process of extending an open trading position past the broker's daily cut-off time, which triggers the swap charge or credit for holding that position overnight.
Trading CostsSpreadThe spread is the difference between a currency pair's bid (sell) and ask (buy) price, usually measured in pips, and it is the primary cost of trading with most forex and CFD brokers.
Trading CostsSwap (Rollover)A swap is the interest debited from or credited to a trading account for holding a leveraged position overnight, based on the interest-rate difference between the two currencies (or the financing rate for CFDs) in the position.
Trading CostsVariable SpreadA variable, or floating, spread widens and narrows with market liquidity and volatility, typically at its tightest during active trading sessions and wider around major news events or thin liquidity.
Technical Analysis22
Technical AnalysisBollinger BandsBollinger Bands plot a moving average with two volatility-based bands, helping traders judge whether price is relatively high, low, or expanding in volatility.
Technical AnalysisBreakoutA breakout is a decisive move of price beyond an established support, resistance, or pattern boundary, often signalling the start of a new move.
Technical AnalysisCandlestickA candlestick is a chart element showing the open, high, low, and close of a period, whose body and wicks reveal the balance between buyers and sellers.
Technical AnalysisCandlestick PatternA candlestick pattern is a single- or multi-candle formation, such as a doji or engulfing, that signals potential shifts in market sentiment.
Technical AnalysisChart PatternA chart pattern is a recognizable formation in price action, such as a triangle or head-and-shoulders, used to anticipate continuation or reversal.
Technical AnalysisDojiA doji is a candlestick with a very small body where open and close are nearly equal, reflecting market indecision and a possible reversal.
Technical AnalysisDouble Top / Double BottomA double top (or double bottom) is a reversal pattern where price twice fails to break a level, hinting the prevailing trend is exhausting.
Technical AnalysisDowntrendA downtrend is a sequence of lower highs and lower lows, signalling that sellers are in control of the market.
Technical AnalysisExponential Moving Average (EMA)An exponential moving average weights recent prices more heavily than a simple moving average, so it reacts faster to new price changes.
Technical AnalysisFibonacci RetracementFibonacci retracement uses horizontal levels derived from the Fibonacci sequence to identify likely areas where a pullback may find support or resistance.
Technical AnalysisHead and ShouldersHead and shoulders is a reversal chart pattern of three peaks, the middle one highest, whose break of the neckline signals a likely trend change.
Technical AnalysisMACDThe Moving Average Convergence Divergence indicator tracks the relationship between two moving averages to signal momentum shifts and trend changes.
Technical AnalysisMoving AverageA moving average smooths price data over a chosen period to reveal the underlying trend and act as dynamic support or resistance.
Technical AnalysisPrice ActionPrice action is the analysis of raw price movement and candlestick behavior, without heavy reliance on indicators, to make trading decisions.
Technical AnalysisRelative Strength Index (RSI)The RSI is a momentum oscillator from 0 to 100 that flags overbought conditions above 70 and oversold conditions below 30.
Technical AnalysisResistanceResistance is a price level where selling pressure has historically been strong enough to halt or reverse an advance.
Technical AnalysisStochastic OscillatorThe stochastic oscillator compares a closing price to its recent range to gauge momentum and highlight overbought or oversold conditions.
Technical AnalysisSupportSupport is a price level where buying interest has historically been strong enough to halt or reverse a decline.
Technical AnalysisTechnical AnalysisTechnical analysis is the study of price charts, patterns, and indicators to forecast future price movement, based on the idea that history tends to repeat.
Technical AnalysisTrading VolumeTrading volume is the number of units or contracts traded in a period, used to confirm the strength behind a price move or breakout.
Technical AnalysisTrendA trend is the general direction in which a market's price is moving over time, classified as uptrend, downtrend, or sideways range.
Technical AnalysisUptrendAn uptrend is a sequence of higher highs and higher lows, signalling that buyers are in control of the market.
Fundamental Analysis15
Fundamental AnalysisCarry TradeA carry trade borrows a low-interest currency to buy a higher-interest one, aiming to profit from the interest-rate difference captured through swaps.
Fundamental AnalysisCentral BankA central bank manages a nation's currency, money supply, and interest rates, making it the single most influential player in the forex market.
Fundamental AnalysisConsumer Price Index (CPI)The Consumer Price Index measures the average change in prices paid by consumers over time and is the headline gauge of inflation for markets.
Fundamental AnalysisDovishDovish describes a central-bank stance that favors lower interest rates to support growth, generally a weakening influence on the currency.
Fundamental AnalysisEconomic CalendarAn economic calendar is a schedule of upcoming data releases and events, such as CPI or rate decisions, that traders use to anticipate volatility.
Fundamental AnalysisFOMCThe Federal Open Market Committee is the US Federal Reserve body that sets interest rates, and its meetings are top-tier market-moving events.
Fundamental AnalysisFundamental AnalysisFundamental analysis evaluates economic data, interest rates, and central-bank policy to judge a currency or asset's intrinsic value and likely direction.
Fundamental AnalysisGross Domestic Product (GDP)Gross domestic product is the total value of goods and services an economy produces, a broad measure of economic health that influences currency strength.
Fundamental AnalysisHawkishHawkish describes a central-bank stance that favors higher interest rates to curb inflation, generally supportive of the currency.
Fundamental AnalysisInflationInflation is the rate at which the general price level of goods and services rises, eroding purchasing power and heavily influencing central-bank rate decisions.
Fundamental AnalysisInterest RateAn interest rate is the cost of borrowing money set by a central bank, and its changes are among the most powerful drivers of currency values.
Fundamental AnalysisMonetary PolicyMonetary policy is the set of central-bank actions on interest rates and money supply used to control inflation and support economic growth.
Fundamental AnalysisNon-Farm Payrolls (NFP)Non-farm payrolls is a closely watched monthly US report of jobs added outside farming, often causing sharp volatility in the dollar and related markets.
Fundamental AnalysisQuantitative Easing (QE)Quantitative easing is a central-bank policy of buying assets to inject money into the economy, which typically weakens the currency involved.
Fundamental AnalysisSafe-Haven CurrencyA safe-haven currency, such as the US dollar, Japanese yen, or Swiss franc, tends to attract demand and strengthen during market turmoil.
Risk Management11
Risk ManagementDiversificationDiversification spreads capital across different instruments or markets so that a loss in one is cushioned by others, reducing overall portfolio risk.
Risk ManagementDrawdownDrawdown is the peak-to-trough decline in an account's value, a key measure of how much capital a strategy puts at risk before recovering.
Risk ManagementHedgingHedging is opening an offsetting position to reduce exposure to adverse price moves in an existing trade or portfolio.
Risk ManagementMaximum DrawdownMaximum drawdown is the largest peak-to-trough loss an account or strategy has experienced, used to assess worst-case risk and staying power.
Risk ManagementMoney ManagementMoney management is the overall discipline of allocating capital, sizing positions, and controlling risk to preserve and grow an account over time.
Risk ManagementPosition SizingPosition sizing is the process of choosing how large a trade to place so that a loss stays within a planned percentage of the account.
Risk ManagementRisk ManagementRisk management is the practice of limiting potential losses through tools like stop-losses, position sizing, and diversification to protect trading capital.
Risk ManagementRisk Per TradeRisk per trade is the fixed portion of account capital, often 1-2 percent, a trader is willing to lose on any single position.
Risk ManagementRisk-Reward RatioThe risk-reward ratio compares the potential loss of a trade to its potential gain, helping traders take only setups where the reward justifies the risk.
Risk ManagementStop-LossA stop-loss is a preset order that automatically closes a losing trade at a chosen level to cap the loss, a cornerstone of disciplined trading.
Risk ManagementTake-ProfitA take-profit is a preset order that automatically closes a winning trade at a target price, locking in gains without needing to watch the market.
Trading Psychology8
Trading PsychologyFear and GreedFear and greed are the two dominant emotions that drive market behavior and cause traders to sell too early or hold losers too long.
Trading PsychologyFOMO (Fear of Missing Out)FOMO is the fear of missing out that pushes traders to chase a move late, often entering at poor prices without a valid setup.
Trading PsychologyLoss AversionLoss aversion is the tendency to feel losses more strongly than equivalent gains, leading traders to cut winners early and let losers run.
Trading PsychologyOvertradingOvertrading is placing too many trades, often out of boredom, greed, or the urge to recover losses, which inflates costs and erodes results.
Trading PsychologyRevenge TradingRevenge trading is impulsively entering new trades to win back a recent loss, usually abandoning the plan and compounding the damage.
Trading PsychologyTrading DisciplineTrading discipline is the ability to follow a predefined plan and risk rules consistently, resisting impulsive emotion-driven decisions.
Trading PsychologyTrading PlanA trading plan is a written set of rules for entries, exits, risk, and markets that keeps decisions objective and repeatable.
Trading PsychologyTrading PsychologyTrading psychology is the study of how emotions like fear and greed affect trading decisions, and the mental discipline needed to trade a plan consistently.
Regulation & Safety13
Regulation & SafetyAML (Anti-Money Laundering)Anti-money-laundering rules require brokers to monitor and report suspicious activity to prevent the financial system being used to launder illicit funds.
Regulation & SafetyASIC (Australian Securities and Investments Commission)ASIC is Australia's corporate and financial services regulator, a respected tier-1 body overseeing brokers operating in and from Australia.
Regulation & SafetyBroker RegulationBroker regulation is the framework of licensing and oversight a broker operates under, a primary indicator of safety and trustworthiness for traders.
Regulation & SafetyClient Money ProtectionClient money protection is the set of rules and safeguards, including segregation and compensation schemes, that shield trader funds held by a broker.
Regulation & SafetyCySEC (Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission)CySEC is the Cyprus regulator whose EU-passportable licenses are widely held by forex and CFD brokers serving European clients.
Regulation & SafetyFCA (Financial Conduct Authority)The FCA is the UK's financial regulator, regarded as a tier-1 authority that enforces strict capital, conduct, and client-protection rules on brokers.
Regulation & SafetyFinancial RegulatorA financial regulator is a government or statutory body that licenses and supervises brokers to protect clients and keep markets fair.
Regulation & SafetyInvestor Compensation SchemeAn investor compensation scheme reimburses eligible clients up to a set amount if a regulated broker fails and cannot return their funds.
Regulation & SafetyKYC (Know Your Customer)KYC is the identity-verification process brokers must perform when onboarding clients, checking documents to comply with anti-fraud and AML rules.
Regulation & SafetyLeverage CapA leverage cap is a regulator-imposed limit on the maximum leverage brokers may offer retail clients, such as the EU's 30:1 on major pairs, to curb risk.
Regulation & SafetyOffshore BrokerAn offshore broker is licensed in a lightly regulated jurisdiction, often offering higher leverage but weaker client protections than tier-1 regulators.
Regulation & SafetySegregated FundsSegregated funds are client deposits kept in bank accounts separate from the broker's own money, protecting them if the broker becomes insolvent.
Regulation & SafetyTier-1 RegulatorA tier-1 regulator is a top-tier authority such as the FCA, ASIC, or the US NFA whose strict oversight signals a high level of broker safety.
Platforms & Tools10
Platforms & ToolsAlgorithmic TradingAlgorithmic trading uses computer programs to execute trades automatically based on predefined rules, removing emotion and enabling speed and scale.
Platforms & ToolsBacktestingBacktesting runs a trading strategy against historical price data to estimate how it would have performed before risking real capital.
Platforms & ToolsCopy TradingCopy trading automatically mirrors the trades of a chosen experienced trader in your own account, letting beginners follow proven strategies.
Platforms & ToolscTradercTrader is a trading platform favored for ECN-style execution, depth-of-market pricing, and a clean interface with advanced order types.
Platforms & ToolsExpert Advisor (EA)An Expert Advisor is an automated trading program, chiefly on MetaTrader, that executes a strategy's entries, exits, and risk rules without manual input.
Platforms & ToolsMetaTrader 4 (MT4)MetaTrader 4 is the long-standing industry-standard forex platform, known for its charting, custom indicators, and Expert Advisor automation.
Platforms & ToolsMetaTrader 5 (MT5)MetaTrader 5 is the successor to MT4, adding more timeframes, order types, an economic calendar, and multi-asset support beyond forex.
Platforms & ToolsSocial TradingSocial trading is a networked approach where traders share ideas, performance, and signals, blending community insight with copy-trading features.
Platforms & ToolsTrading PlatformA trading platform is the software through which traders analyze markets and place orders, ranging from MT4 and cTrader to broker web and mobile apps.
Platforms & ToolsVPS (Virtual Private Server)A VPS is a remote always-on server that traders use to run automated strategies and Expert Advisors 24/5 with low latency and no local downtime.
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