Glossary:
- Altcoin
- Ask Price
- Asset Allocation
- Balance
- Base Currency
- Bear Market
- Beta
- Bid Price
- Bitcoin
- Blockchain
- Blue Chip Stocks
- Bond
- Bull Market
- Capital Gain
- Capital Preservation
- Cold Storage
- Contract for Differences
- Crypto Exchange
- Cryptocurrency
- Currency Pair
- Day Order
- Day Trading
- Debt Security
- DeFi
- Diversification
- Dividend
- Drawdown
- Equity
- ETF
- Ethereum
- Fiscal Policy
- Forex
- Forex Broker
- Fork
- Free Margin
- FUD
- Fundamental Analysis
- Gas
- GDP
- GTC
- Hash Rate
- Hedge
- Hedge Fund
- HODL
- Hot Wallet
- ICO
- Index Fund
- Inflation
- IPO
- Leverage
- Limit Order
- Liquidity
- Long Position
- Lot Size
- Margin
- Market Capitalization
- Market Order
- Mining
- Moving Average
- Mutual Fund
- NFT
- Node
- Order
- Overbought
- Oversold
- P/E Ratio
- Pip
- Portfolio
- Position
- Private Key
- Public Float
- Public Key
- Pump and Dump
- Quote Currency
- ReFi
- Resistance Level
- Risk Tolerance
- Satoshi
- Secondary Market Offering
- Securities
- Share
- Shares Outstanding
- Short Position
- Slippage
- Smart Contract
- Spinning (IPO)
- Spread
- Stablecoin
- Stock
- Stock Exchange
- Stockbroker
- Stop-Loss Order
- Support Level
- Swap
- Take-Profit Order
- Technical Analysis
- Token
- Treasury Bonds
- Volatility
- Volume
- Wallet
- Whale
- Yield
What is Bull Market?
Bull Market
The opposite of a bear market, a bull market is a condition in which the prices of securities are rising or are expected to rise. The term "bull market" is most often used to refer to the stock market but can be applied to anything that is traded, such as bonds, currencies, and commodities.