Market Terms

Stock market glossary

Clear definitions of the trading and investing vocabulary you'll encounter in news, research, and on the trading floor. Browse by category or jump to a letter.

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32 terms
B
B

Bid and Ask

Trading

The bid is the highest price a buyer will pay; the ask is the lowest price a seller will accept. The gap between them is the spread.

B

Bonus Issue

Corporate

Additional shares given free to existing shareholders in proportion to their holdings, funded from the company's reserves.

B

Buyback

Corporate

When a company repurchases its own shares from the market, often to return surplus cash to shareholders.

C
C

Circuit Limit

Regulatory

Exchange-set price bands that halt trading in a stock or index if it moves up or down beyond a defined percentage in a day.

D
D

Demat Account

Accounts

An electronic account used to hold shares and securities in dematerialised form, removing the need for physical certificates.

D

Dividend

Corporate

A share of a company's profits distributed to shareholders, usually in cash, on a per-share basis.

E
E

Expiry

Derivatives

The date on which a derivative contract ends and is settled. Indian index and stock derivatives expire on set weekly or monthly dates.

F
F

F&O (Futures & Options)

Derivatives

Derivative contracts whose value is derived from an underlying asset such as a stock, index, or commodity.

F

Fundamental Analysis

Analysis

Evaluating a company's financial health — earnings, debt, and growth — to judge whether its shares are fairly priced.

F

Futures

Derivatives

A contract to buy or sell an asset at a fixed price on a future date, regardless of the market price at that time.

I
I

Index

Analysis

A basket of stocks that tracks overall market performance, such as the Nifty 50 or the Sensex.

I

Intraday Trading

Trading

Buying and selling the same security within a single trading day, with all positions squared off before market close.

I

IPO (Initial Public Offering)

Regulatory

The first time a private company offers its shares to the public for purchase on a stock exchange.

K
K

KYC

Accounts

Know Your Customer — the one-time identity verification (PAN, Aadhaar, bank proof) required before you can trade or invest.

L
L

Leverage

Derivatives

Using borrowed funds or margin to increase exposure. It magnifies both potential gains and potential losses.

L

Limit Order

Trading

An order that executes only at a price you specify or better, giving you control over the entry or exit price.

L

Liquidity

Trading

How easily an asset can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price. Highly traded stocks are more liquid.

L

Lot Size

Derivatives

The minimum quantity of an asset that can be traded in a single contract, especially in derivatives and IPO applications.

M
M

Margin

Derivatives

The funds required to open and maintain a leveraged position. It lets traders take larger positions than their capital alone allows.

M

Market Capitalisation

Analysis

The total value of a company's shares — share price multiplied by the number of outstanding shares.

M

Market Order

Trading

An order to buy or sell immediately at the best available current price.

N
N

Nominee

Accounts

A person you designate to receive the holdings in your demat or trading account in the event of your death.

O
O

Options

Derivatives

Contracts giving the right, but not the obligation, to buy (call) or sell (put) an asset at a set price before expiry.

P
P

P/E Ratio

Analysis

Price-to-Earnings ratio — a stock's price divided by its earnings per share, used to gauge relative valuation.

S
S

SEBI

Regulatory

The Securities and Exchange Board of India — the regulator that oversees and protects participants in the securities market.

S

Settlement (T+1)

Trading

The process of transferring securities and funds after a trade. Indian markets settle on a T+1 basis — one working day after the trade.

S

Stock Split

Corporate

Dividing existing shares into multiple shares to lower the per-share price and improve liquidity, without changing total value.

S

Stop Loss

Trading

A pre-set order that automatically exits a position when the price moves against you by a defined amount, limiting downside risk.

T
T

Technical Analysis

Analysis

Studying price charts and patterns to gauge market sentiment and the likely timing of moves.

T

Trading Account

Accounts

The account used to place buy and sell orders on the exchange. It works alongside your demat account, which stores the securities.

V
V

Volatility

Analysis

The degree to which a price fluctuates over time. Higher volatility means larger and faster price swings.

V

Volume

Trading

The total number of shares traded in a given period — a measure of activity and interest in a stock.