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Glossary: I

These are common terms used in the financial services industry

Illiquid market

A market with relatively less aggregate volume in the order book. In an illiquid market, a small amount of business often moves prices by a disproportionate amount, and bid and offer prices can be far apart.

Illiquidity

The difficulty of changing your assets to cash because of a lack of demand for the asset you're trying to sell. As a market maker, we provide liquidity by constantly quoting a bid and offer spread . Also see Liquidity.

Index

An index, such as the FTSE 100 or S&P 500, gauges the prosperity or value of a section of the stock market. It is calculated from the prices of selected stocks, usually using a weighted average. It is not possible to invest directly in an index; instead investors trade in funds or other products that track the movement of an index.

Industrial production

A monthly economic indicator that measures changes in output for the UK’s industrial sector, including manufacturing, mining and utilities.

Inflation

An increase in the general price of goods and services.

Inflation rate

A measure of inflation that occurs in a given period (a year or calendar quarter for example). The inflation rate shows us how quickly the general price of goods and services is rising.

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

The process by which a company is floated on the stock market for the first time. Offering shares to the investment public is a way of raising capital for further expansion. Also known as New issue.

Instant execution

An order that is executed at the price displayed on the screen. If the price isn’t available a requote can be offered as a new two-way price, at which you can resubmit the order or choose to cancel it.

Interbank rates

Rate of interest which banks charge each other on a short-term basis.

Intraday trading

Trading where positions are opened and then closed out within the same trading day.
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