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Significats de increase volatility en anglès
Encara no tenim significats per a "increase volatility".
Ús de increase volatility en anglès
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The opening of the U.S. market could increasevolatility further, one emissions trader added.
2
Volume is expected to be low in the holiday-shortened week, which could increasevolatility.
3
Market participants say wide spreads between bids and offers also complicate trading, and increasevolatility.
4
Trading volume is expected to be light this week due to the Christmas holiday, which could increasevolatility.
5
Volume usually drops before the long weekend to mark the Independence Day holiday and that could increasevolatility.
6
That in turn will lead to home price declines and mortgage losses, which would increasevolatility in RMBS prices.
7
The survey found the tax was expected to increasevolatility in local mining stocks over the next 12 months.
8
High temperatures can increasevolatility.
9
A dip below 85 yen could increasevolatility and push Japanese officials to talk try to talk down the yen.
10
That combined with the sheer speed at which thousands of transactions can move in one direction is set to increasevolatility.
11
High-frequency trading uses high-speed computers to drive a range of trading strategies, some of which critics say are unfair and increasevolatility.
12
May equity options and some options on stock indexes will stop trading at Friday's close and settle on Saturday, which may increasevolatility.
13
Bruce Latimer, a trader at Dundee Securities, also pointed to a gold option expiry on Tuesday that will increasevolatility in the sub-sector.
14
It would increasevolatility by forcing traders to make fewer but bigger trades, which would create bigger lurches up and down on financial markets.
15
Investment banks and trading exchanges have voiced concerns tighter regulation of position limits could increasevolatility in oil markets by reducing the number of participants.
16
Banks also warned that rushing in new rules could further hamper liquidity and increasevolatility, making it harder for markets to absorb sharp price moves.