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What Does Futures Mean?

A futures is a standardised tradable contract on a commodity or financial instrument. The underlying may be a commodity such as agricultural products, crude oil, gold or a financial instrument.

Volume And Price Relationship Under The Stop And Go System

As the stop limit system limits the amount of stock up or down in a day, so that the energy of the long and short cannot be thoroughly ventilated, easy to form a unilateral market.

10 Questions To Ask Before Buying a Stock - Above

Surveys conducted during the stock market frenzy of the late 1990s showed that the average investor would put a lot of effort into researching where to go on holiday, but skimped on the time spent researching stocks to buy.

What Is a Fund Subscription

A fund subscription is the process by which an investor purchases units in an open-ended fund during the fund's offering period, before the fund has been established.

The Secrets You Must Know For Stock Market Manipulation (II)

The choice of buying point in the plate

What Is a Fund Trading Account

A fund trading account is an account opened by a selling institution for an investor to record the movements and balances of fund shares bought and sold through that selling institution.

What Is The Difference Between Futures Basis Spreads And Spreads

The difference between futures basis spreads and spreads.

The Bubble Economy

The bubble economy can be divided into three phases: the formation phase of the bubble, the inflation phase of the bubble and the collapse phase of the bubble. 

How To Deal With The Risks Of Hedge Funds?

Investment risk has become an obstacle for more and more investors who are hesitant to invest in the market, so today's fund class will introduce you to a type of fund that is designed to hedge risk.

What Are Government Bonds?

Government bonds are debt instruments issued by the government to fundraise and promise to pay interest and repay principal over a certain period of time, specifically including state bonds, i.e., central government bonds, local government bonds and government guaranteed bonds, the most important of which are government bonds.