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How to explain the bad news in futures?
Negative: beneficial to the general trend. Let me introduce some common futures words to you. You can look at them:

1. futures "lock position" refers to opening positions in the opposite direction to the original trading direction, with the same or similar quantity, rather than closing the original position.

2. Close the position: buy and sell, or buy and settle the original new order after selling.

3. Divide positions: Exchange members or customers engage in futures trading in the name of other members or other customers in order to exceed their positions, thus affecting prices, manipulating the market and evading the position limit of the exchange, and their total positions in each seat exceed the position limit of the exchange for this customer or member.

4. Moving positions (dumping positions): Exchange members move positions from one seat to another in order to create market illusion or transfer profits.

5. Performance: the action taken when the call option holder wants to buy the relevant futures contract or when the put option holder wants to sell the relevant futures contract.

6. Gap: the price difference of the grade and grade of the same commodity in different delivery places.

7. Commission: the fee charged by the brokerage company when executing transactions for customers.

8. Position: the number of trading contracts held in the transaction.

9. Long position: bullish buying.

10. Short position: sell bearish.

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12. Good: beneficial to the general trend.

13. Negative: beneficial to the general trend.

14. Trend: the direction of market development.

15.Yincandle: the opening price per unit time is higher than the closing price.

16. Positive candle: the closing price per unit time is higher than the opening price.

17. Gap: Also called gap, there is no trading area for price fluctuation.

18. Basis: the difference between the prices of different or the same varieties in different contracts or markets.

19. Forced liquidation: members or customers of a futures exchange take advantage of their capital to control futures trading positions or monopolize spot commodities that can be delivered, over-position and deliver, force the other party to breach the contract or close the position at an unfavorable price, and deliberately raise or lower the futures market price to reap huge profits. According to the different operation methods, it can be divided into two ways: "more forced air" and "more forced air".

20. Counterattack: the behavior of exchange members or customers who attempt or actually seriously affect futures prices or market positions, deliberately collude, and trade or buy with each other in a pre-agreed way or price to create market illusion.

2 1. Opening positions: The trading behavior of starting to buy or sell futures contracts is called "opening positions" or "establishing trading positions".

22. Close position: buy and sell, or buy and settle the original new order after selling. The reverse transaction conducted by traders in order to close the contract in their hands is called "closing the position" or "hedging".

23. Settlement: Calculate and distribute the trading margin, profit and loss, handling fee, delivery loan and other related funds of your members according to the trading results and relevant regulations of the Exchange.

24. Positions: The contracts held by traders are called "positions".

25. Premium: 1) Additional fees paid by commodities above the delivery standard of futures contracts allowed by the exchange. 2) refers to the price relationship between different delivery months of a commodity. When the price of one month is higher than that of another month, we call the month with higher price as the premium of the month with lower price. 3) When the transaction price of a security is higher than the face value of the security, it is also called premium or premium.

26. Delivery: Spot transaction between the seller and the buyer of a futures contract. All exchanges have stipulated the specific steps of spot commodity delivery. Some futures contracts, such as stock index contracts, are delivered in cash.

27. Go long: Buying futures contracts in the belief that prices will rise is called "short selling" or "going long", that is, trading long.

28. Short selling: short selling price, selling futures contracts, called "short selling" or "short selling", that is, short selling transactions.

29. Arbitrage: A trading technique that speculators or hedgers can use, that is, buying spot or futures commodities in one market and selling the same or similar commodities in another market in the hope of making a difference between the two transactions, thus making a profit.