💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Program trading"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| programme tradingnoun | (British spelling) Alternative form of program trading. [(business, computing, finance) High-volume and high-speed buying and selling of investment securities, such as stocks and bonds, which is initiated and executed by brokerage firms' computer programs that continually monitor market conditions.] |
| proprietary tradingnoun | (finance) Trading activity conducted by a securities firm for its own profit rather than for its clients. |
| front runningnoun | (finance) The illegal practice of a stockbroker who, on receiving a large client order, places an order for his or her own account ahead of the client's, knowing that when the client's order is placed it will move the market and create a profit for the broker. |
| stockjobbingnoun | (trading, dated) Making markets in equity securities; dealing in stocks and shares. |
| shadow tradingnoun | (finance) The buying or selling of securities of a company that is economically linked to a publicly held company about which a person has inside information. |
| e-tradingnoun | e-trade; online trading, as of stocks and shares |
| jobbingnoun | Work carried out by the job; piecework, odd-job work. |
| pyramidingnoun | The practice of an athlete progressively increasing the dosage of an illicit drug to a maximum, and then progressively lowering it, between competitions so as to reduce the chances of being caught. |
| stockbrokeragenoun | stockbroking |
| quote stuffingnoun | (finance) A form of market manipulation employed by high-frequency traders that involves quickly entering and withdrawing large orders in an attempt to flood the market and create confusion. |
| in-and-out tradingnoun | (finance) The practice of buying shares and then selling them shortly afterward. |
| playbrokingnoun | The procuring and sale of theatrical plays. |
| aftermarketnoun | (business) The market for further goods and services, such as replacement parts and accessories, subsequent to the sale of a product such as an automobile or computer. |
| day tradenoun | (business, finance) A transaction in which units of stock or other investment instruments are purchased and then sold within a single market day. |
| repackagingnoun | The process of packaging something again or anew. |
| speculationnoun | (business, finance) An investment involving higher-than-normal risk in order to obtain a higher-than-normal return. |
| insider tradingnoun | (business, finance, law) The illegal trading of a public company's stock or other securities based on material, nonpublic information about the company. |
| put throughverb | (idiomatic) To connect (a telephone caller) with the callee. |
| scalpingnoun | (finance) A legitimate method of arbitrage of small price gaps created by the bid-ask spread. |
| pyramid tradingnoun | (finance) A strategy by which the trader gradually adds to an existing trade or position as the price moves in the expected direction. |
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