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Trader (finance)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A person who trades stocks
Part of a series on
Financial markets
Looking up at a computerized stocks-value board at the Philippine Stock Exchange
Bond market
Stock market
Other markets
Over-the-counter (off-exchange)
Trading
Related areas

A trader is a person, firm, or entity in finance who buys and sells financial instruments, such as forex, cryptocurrencies, stocks, bonds, commodities, derivatives, and mutual funds, indices in the capacity of agent, hedger, arbitrager, or speculator.[1]

Duties and types

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The word "trader" appeared as early as 1863 in a universal dictionary as "trading man."[2] Traders work for financial institutions as foreign exchange or securities dealers in the cash market and in the futures market, or for their own account as proprietary traders.[3] They also include stock exchange traders, but not stockbrokers or lead brokers.

Traders buy and sell financial instruments traded in the stock markets, derivatives markets and commodity markets, comprising the stock exchanges, derivatives exchanges, and the commodities exchanges. Several categories and designations for diverse kinds of traders are found in finance, including:

Income

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NYSE's stock exchange traders floor c 1960, before the introduction of electronic readouts and computer screens

According to The Wall Street Journal in 2004, a managing director convertible bond trader was earning between 700,000ドル and 900,000ドル on average.[4]

See also

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References

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