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Definition of Block trade

Block Trade Image 1

Block trade

A large trading order, defined on the New York Stock Exchange as an order that consists of
10,000 shares of a given stock or a total market value of $200,000 or more.



Related Terms:

Block house

Brokerage firms that help to find potential buyers or sellers of large block trades.


Program trades

Also called basket trades, orders requiring the execution of trades in a large number of
different stocks at as near the same time as possible. Related: block trade


Upstairs market

A network of trading desks for the major brokerage firms and institutional investors that
communicate with each other by means of electronic display systems and telephones to facilitate block trades
and program trades.


Balance of trade

Net flow of goods (exports minus imports) between countries.


Basket trades

Related: Program trades.


Block voting

A group of shareholders banding together to vote their shares in a single block.


Blocked currency

A currency that is not freely convertible to other currencies due to exchange controls.


Block Trade Image 2

Counter trade

The exchange of goods for other goods rather than for cash; barter.


Flat trades

1) A bond in default trades flat; that is, the price quoted covers both principal and unpaid,
accrued interest.
2) Any security that trades without accrued interest or at a price that includes accrued
interest is said to trade flat.


Floor trader

A member who generally trades only for his own account, for an account controlled by him or
who has such a trade made for him. Also referred to as a "local".


Forward trade

A transaction in which the settlement will occur on a specified date in the future at a price
agreed upon the trade date.


Informationless trades

trades that are the result of either a reallocation of wealth or an implementation of an
investment strategy that only utilizes existing information.


Information-motivated trades

trades in which an investor believes he or she possesses pertinent
information not currently reflected in the stock's price.


Posttrade benchmarks

Prices after the decision to trade.


Pre-trade benchmarks

Prices occurring before or at the decision to trade.


Publicly traded assets

Assets that can be traded in a public market, such as the stock market.


Block Trade Image 3

Registered trader

A member of the exchange who executes frequent trades for his or her own account.


Reversing trade

Entering the opposite side of a currently held futures position to close out the position.


Spot trade

The purchase and sale of a foreign currency, commodity, or other item for immediate delivery.


Terms of trade

The weighted average of a nation's export prices relative to its import prices.


Thinly traded

Infrequently traded.


Trade

A verbal (or electronic) transaction involving one party buying a security from another party. Once a
trade is consummated, it is considered "done" or final. Settlement occurs 1-5 business days later.


Trade acceptance

Written demand that has been accepted by an industrial company to pay a given sum at a future date.
Related: banker's acceptance.


Trade credit

Credit granted by a firm to another firm for the purchase of goods or services.


Trade date

In an interest rate swap, the date that the counterparties commit to the swap. Also, the date on
which a trade occurs. trades generally settle (are paid for) 1-5 business days after a trade date. With stocks,
settlement is generally 3 business days after the trade.


Trade debt

Accounts payable.


Trade draft

A draft addressed to a commercial enterprise. See:draft.


Trade on top of

trade at a narrow or no spread in basis points relative to some other bond yield, usually
Treasury bonds.


Trade house

A firm which deals in actual commodities.


Traders

Persons who take positions in securities and their derivatives with the objective of making profits.
traders can make markets by trading the flow. When they do that, their objective is to earn the bid/ask spread.
traders can also be of the sort who take proprietary positions whereby they seek to profit from the directional
movement of prices or spread positions.


Uptick trade

Related:Tick-test rules


North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

an agreement among Canada, Mexico, and the United States establishing the North American Free trade Zone, with a resulting reduction in trade barriers


World Trade Organization (WTO)

the arbiter of global trade that was created in 1995 under the General Agreement on Tariffs and trade; each signatory country has one
vote in trade disputes


trade-off theory

Debt levels are chosen to balance interest tax shields against the costs of financial distress.


Balance of Merchandise Trade

The difference between exports and imports of goods.


Balance of Trade

See balance of merchandise trade.


Free Trade

The absence of any government restrictions, such as tariffs or quotas, on imports or exports.


Terms of Trade

The quantity of imports that can be obtained for a unit of exports, measured by the ratio of an export price index to an import price index.


Trade Deficit

Deficit on the balance of merchandise trade.


Trade Loading

A term used for channel stuffing in the domestic tobacco industry.


 

 

 

 

 

 

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