"Cloud" means that as long as your list is set on the software, even if your computer is turned off, the software will help you close the deal, because your list is hung on Wenhua's cloud server.
2. First of all, choose the price triggered by the stop loss.
Our previous account was empty, and the opening price was 20 1 15. Then the stop loss, in theory, should be higher than this price. For example, 202 15 stop loss. Then this is 100 stop loss.
First of all, there are two more basic questions:
1, you click the stop loss. If you don't set the price, the default is your cost price of 20 1 15. If you directly click on the green triangle arrow at the back now, it means that your stop-loss price is the same as the opening price, and the current price is within this range. If you click on it, it will probably be executed immediately. Many people trigger a stop loss order because the price is unreasonable. Too close to the cost, fluctuations will come.
2. Your opening price is 20 1 15, so if the price rises immediately after you open the position, then the current price is 203 15, which is higher than 100. If you place a stop loss order on this, the software will remind you that "the current price is no longer suitable".
2. Futures, whose English name is futures, is completely different from spot. Spot is actually a tradable commodity. Futures are mainly not commodities, but standardized tradable contracts with certain mass products such as cotton, soybeans and oil and financial assets such as stocks and bonds as the targets. Therefore, the subject matter can be commodities (such as gold, crude oil and agricultural products) or financial instruments.
The delivery date of futures can be one week later, one month later, three months later or even one year later.
A contract or agreement to buy or sell futures is called a futures contract. The place where futures are bought and sold is called the futures market. Investors can invest or speculate in futures.
Third, development.
The earliest futures market in history was Japan in the edo shogunate era. Because the price of rice at that time had a great influence on economic and military activities, rice merchants decided to buy and sell rice in stock according to the output of rice and the market's expectation of rice.