Futures company code and customer code
2. An ID card can only generate one customer code in the exchange, and different futures companies have different company codes.
When you open an account in another futures company, your customer code remains the same, but the company code will change.
In this way, even if your customer code remains the same, different company codes combined with your customer code represent different futures accounts.
There are no restrictions on futures accounts, but when docking in silver period, a bank card can only dock with one futures account.
Extended data:
Explanation of Kaiping clause of futures:
Bilateral opening (double opening):
If the amount of Masukura is equal to the amount on hand, it is a bilateral opening; Double opening is the opening of new long positions and new short positions in the futures market.
The so-called futures double opening refers to the situation that both buyers and sellers open positions at the same time to buy or sell contracts of the same variety and the same amount, which happens to be a transaction.
The double opening of futures must have several elements at the same time, for example, both buyers and sellers are new positions, with the same contract variety and similar quantity.
Benefits of double futures opening:
The result of the double opening is an increase in positions and an increase in the attention of futures.
1, bilateral settlement (double level):
If the quantity of Masukura is equal to the negative on-hand quantity, it is bilateral liquidation; The deal between the old bull selling and the old bear buying. That is, both buyers and sellers are closing their positions.
2. Short position (short position):
Taking the purchase price as the transaction price, Masukura is positive, which is a short position, reflecting active selling;
3. Long positions (multiple positions):
Taking the selling price as the transaction price, Masukura is positive and long, reflecting active buying;
4. Empty positions (empty positions):
Taking the selling price as the transaction price and the Masukura is negative, it is a short position, reflecting the active liquidation of the short position;
5. Long position (multi-level):
Taking the purchase price as the transaction price and Masukura as negative, it is a long position, reflecting a long position;
6. Multi-head change hands (multi-change):
Traders who used to hold long positions (that is, old ones) sold positions and bought more positions. Masukura is 0, and the current price is greater than the previous price;
7. Short positions change hands (short positions change hands):
Traders who originally held short positions (that is, old positions) bought and closed their positions, and new positions were sold and opened. Masukura is 0, and the current price is less than the previous price.
8. changing hands:
Masukura is 0, and the current price is equal to the previous price.
Reference source: Baidu Encyclopedia-Futures
Reference source: Baidu Encyclopedia-Futures Trading