| tick |
Minimum price move.
Ãâó: www.forextips.com/forex-terms-p.htm
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| tick |
A high-pitched pulse characterized by a very sharp attack followed by a short "i" vowel sound. The most common background noise from analog discs. Tight - 1) Bass reproduction that is well controlled, free from hangover, not slow. 2) Stereo imaging that is specific, stable, and of the correct width. 3) Describes a closely bunched image in A+B double-mono mode that occupies a very narrow space between the loudspeakers. Tilt - 1) To aim the axis of a loudspeaker upward or downward. ...
Ãâó: www.hometheatertalk.com/Glossary/Glossary2/glossar...
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| tick |
A tick is the minimum movement by which the price of a security, option, or index changes. With stocks, a tick may be little as one cent. With US Treasury securities, the smallest increment is 1/32 of a point, or 31.25 cents, and with corporate and municipal bonds, it's 1/8 of a point, or $1.25. An uptick represents an increase in price, and a downtick a drop in price.
Ãâó: www.freebuck.com/reference/glossary/t.htm
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| tick |
A type of mite which is suited only to one host animal per species. They feed on the blood of the host.
Ãâó: www.lethamshank.co.uk/glossary/glossary.php
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| tick |
A minimum price movement in a security or index. A downtick is the sale of a security at a price below the preceding transaction. An uptick is a sale executed at a price higher than the preceding transaction. In the USA, stock ticks are in USD 1/8 increments (12.5 cents); bond ticks are USD 1/32.
Ãâó: www.citibank.com/corpbank/securities/glossaryt.jsp
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