Electronic trading platform
Electronic Trading Platform (in Arabic, منصة تداول الكترونية), also known as Internet Trading Platform, it is a computer program that can be used to display financial buy and sell signs such as stocks through a broker network. Financial currencies can be traded through the trading platform over a network with a financial intermediary or directly between participants, trading, trading, or trading, commercial units such as stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, derivatives, etc., and points deals with a financial broker such as brokers (brokers) or market makers or Forums or exchanges. These platforms allow trading via trading, at times, the term trading platform is used to refer to the trading platform alone.
You display e-commerce offered a trading quote and quotation on a trading platform and a trading quote display on the trading platform. Some platforms are designed with each other, along with financial markets that were only accessible from specialized trading firms, the platforms may allow specific strategies based on technical analysis or make high-frequency trading.
The electronic trading platforms are usually with devices and cars, for Windows, iOS and Android systems.
It is a virtual platform that simulates stock markets so that the user can trade securities without risk at all, as they are virtual operations with an unreal financial portfolio.
The Virtual Trading System is an educational experience that has been designed with an easy-to-use interface that displays detailed tables and charts, which facilitates monitoring and analysis of market performance, and provides an opportunity to review investment decisions, making it an effective tool for trading training in a way that simulates the ground without exposure to risks.
One of the hypothetical trading systems that can be tried in the Arab world is the "plate" system that Tadawul Saudi Arabia provided.
Historical development
Transactions have traditionally been handled manually, between brokers or counterparties. However, starting in the 1970s, a greater portion of transactions have migrated to electronic trading platforms. These may include electronic communication networks, alternative trading systems, "dark pools" and others.
The first electronic trading platforms were typically associated with stock exchanges and allowed brokers to place orders remotely using private dedicated networks and dumb terminals. Early systems would not always provide live streaming prices and instead allowed brokers or clients to place an order which would be confirmed some time later; these were known as 'request for quote' based systems.
Trading systems evolved to allow for live streaming prices and near instant execution of orders as well as using the internet as the underlying network meaning that location became much less relevant. Some electronic trading platforms have built in scripting tools and even APIs allowing traders to develop automatic or algorithmic trading systems and robots.
The client graphical user interface of the electronic trading platforms can be used to place various orders and are also sometimes called trading turrets (though this may be a misuse of the term, as some refer to the specialized PBX phones used by traders).
During the period from 2001 to 2005, the development and proliferation of trading platforms saw the setting up of dedicated online trading portals, which were electronic online venues with a choice of many electronic trading platforms rather than being restricted to one institution's offering.
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