Glossary
From blockchain to NFT and everything in between, our glossary with a collection of 100+ words and definitions is here to help you speak Crypto fluently.
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A
- Accrued Income
Accrued income is the type of income that has been earned but is yet to be received. The concept falls under the accrual method of accounting. The point of this income calculation is to factor in and compare costs with the income in that period.
- Acid Test RatioThe acid test ratio is a quick test to determine the health of a company. It gives an overview of the liquidity of a company. It accomplishes this by comparing a company’s short-term assets to its short-term liabilities. Doing this allows us to verify if a company has enough cash to pay its immediate liabilities.
- Annual Equivalent Rate (AER)
The Annual Equivalent Rate (AER) is the interest rate for a savings account or investment product with more than one compounding period. While calculating AER, the assumption is that the principal payment’s balance includes any interest paid and the next interest payment will rely on the slightly higher account balance. AER also goes by the name of effective annual interest rate or APY.
B
- Bag Holder
Drawing on the term “bag,” a “bag holder” is an individual who holds a significant amount of some specific crypto. Bag holders usually hang on to their crypto even if there is a sizable price decline.
- Balloon Payment
The large sum of money due when a balloon loan matures is called a balloon payment. This payment is significantly larger than all the repayments before it. Such payments are usually when the monthly repayment amount is rather low.
- Bitcoiner
Bitcoiner is crypto slang for a person who actively engages in activities related to Bitcoin. This includes buying and HODLing Bitcoin. The primary difference between Bitcoiners and other crypto enthusiasts is the greater engagement and commitment they display.
- Boom and Bust Cycle
The boom and bust cycle refers to alternating phases of economic growth and decline. It is typical of modern capitalist economies. The term is sometimes used synonymously with the business cycle. First anticipated by Karl Marx in the 19th century, the boom and bust cycle, driven by investor and consumer psychology as well as market and economic fundamentals, can last anywhere from several months to years.
- Buying The Dip
Buying the dip, sometimes abbreviated as BTD, is an investment strategy. It involves buying an asset when the price is down. In other words, it is going long on an asset. Dip buying can be particularly profitable during long-term uptrends.
C
- Cantillon Effect
The Cantillon Effect is used to describe the uneven impact inflation has on assets and goods within an economy. It refers to the idea that a change in money supply upsets the relative prices of assets and goods. Wages and purchasing power is impacted too. The term named after economist Richard Cantillon is related to the concept of biflation.
- Cash Value Life Insurance
Cash value life insurance is a type of permanent life insurance—meaning it lasts for the lifetime of the holder. It comes with a cash value component, which one may use for anything from sourcing loans or cash to policy premium payments. Although more expensive than term life insurance, they have the advantage of not expiring after a specified time period.
- Cash-and-Carry Arbitrage
Cash-and-carry arbitrage is a market-neutral investment strategy. The strategy seeks to make riskless profit from pricing inefficiencies in the cash (or spot) and futures markets. It does this by combining the purchase of a long position in an asset and the sale of a position in a futures contract for the same.
- Casper
Ethereum’s mechanism for upgrading blocks to “finalized” status is known as Casper. It is a protocol that combines Proof of Work and Proof of Stake. The Proof of Stake part is a new consensus mechanism called “Casper the Friendly Finality Gadget” (FFG). Casper is, thus, what allows new entrants into the network to sync with the canonical chain.
- Chain Split
Chain splits are another term used to describe cryptocurrency forks. They essentially involve the bifurcation of the original crypto into two or more independent projects. When the codebase of a token is copied by an older cryptocurrency, a split is said to have occurred. The further development of the new crypto is independent of the parent coin.
- Chunk
Chunk refers to a fraction of a block produced by sharding in the NEAR protocol. A group of validators is responsible for managing each chunk. They provide the storage and computational resources necessary for the processing of transactions related to that chunk.
- Cipher
An algorithm used to encrypt and decrypt information is known as a cipher. It is a fundamental concept in cryptography—the study and practice of techniques that secure communication. Ciphers help people to exchange information in secret without third parties being able to violate their privacy. They do this by converting plaintext (the original message from a sender) into ciphertext, a coded text that is safe to send.
- Co-Signer
A co-signer is an entity or person who has partial control and access over a cryptocurrency wallet. The type of wallet involved in order to facilitate a co-signatory’s operations is known as a multi-sig wallet. The co-signer must own a set of unique keys to gain access to or transact with the wallet funds.
- Composable DeFi
Composable DeFi refers to the interoperability between different DeFi protocols, which binds the entire DeFi ecosystem together. Composability is a feature embedded in smart contracts that lets different components of a system combine to support new uses. The composability of smart contracts is what enables the DeFi space as a whole to assume this title.
- Consensus
In the context of crypto, a consensus is a condition that one must meet to make any decisions on a blockchain network. To achieve a consensus, all network participants must agree on the order and content of the blocks in the blockchain. Participants usually arrive at a consensus on such decentralized networks through the use of a consensus mechanism.
- Coordinator
Coordinators are a type of client used in some blockchains. They are specialized clients that help nodes validate their copy of the ledger against specific transactions by creating milestones. These milestones are basically transactions recorded on the blockchain. In this way, coordinators serve as a tracking and checking system for such nodes.
- Curve
In the context of crypto, Curve refers to a software program that uses multiple cryptos to operate an Automated Market Maker (AMM) service focused on stablecoins. The Curve platform offers a very efficient way of exchanging tokens while maintaining low fees and slippage. It does this by limiting itself to liquidity pools made up of assets that similarly behaving assets.
D
E
- Exit Point
The exit point is the price at which traders close a position. Usually, a trader sells their holding to exit the trade or, in the case of shorting, may decide to close the position. The trader may or may not determine the exit point in advance. If the trader decides on the exit point early, they may close the position via profit targets (limit orders), stop losses (stop orders), and/or market orders.
F
- FT Wilshire 5000 Index (FTW5000)
Like the Bloomberg Aggregate Bond Index, the FT Wilshire 5000 Index (FTW5000) is a broad-based index. But unlike the former, which focuses on the bond market, this market capitalization-weighted index attempts to capture the whole investible market in the US. Until June 2021, FTW5000 was called the Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index (TMWX). The FT Wilshire 5000 Index once had over 7,500 stocks but currently has much fewer.
G
H
- Hard Cap
In the context of an ICO, the term “hard cap” refers to the maximum number of tokens that the developers of the crypto project are willing to put up for sale. But many also use this term to mean the maximum supply of a coin. That is the number of tokens a crypto protocol can issue.
I
J
K
L
- Law of Accelerating Returns
The Law of Accelerating Returns is a hypothesis postulated by American computer scientist Ray Kurzweil. According to the law, technologies tend to progress exponentially until extrapolating from the trend is impossible. It is similar to the idea of compound interest. The law of accelerating returns is a corollary to Moore’s Law.
- Lehman Formula
The Lehman Formula, also known as the Lehman Scale Formula, is a compensation formula developed by the Lehman Brothers. It helps determine the commission on investment banking or other business brokering services. With this formula, the investment banking fee is structured on a percentage of the transaction amount, which is based on a bunch of tiered fees. The Lehman Brothers developed the formula in the 1960s while raising capital for corporate clients.
M
- Merkle Tree
Merkle tree, also known as a binary hash tree, is a data structure used in computer science applications. Merkle trees serve an important role in the crypto world. They help improve the efficiency and security of the encoding of blockchain data. The data structure is made up of hashes, with each hash representing a transaction. The hashes connect in a way that resembles a tree. Hence the name.
- Money Market
A money market is a financial market where short-term borrowing or lending occurs. It involves trading in short-term debt investments such as commercial paper, bankers’ acceptances, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements. Money market investments offer safety and liquidity to investors.
N
- Naked Shorting
Naked shorting is an illegal market practice. It involves the short selling of shares without really determining that they exist. Usually, traders must borrow a stock or determine that it can be borrowed before they sell it short. When they fail to do that, naked shorting occurs. It refers to short pressuring a stock that may be larger than the tradable shares in the market.
- Net Interest Margin
Net interest margin is the difference between a financial firm’s net interest income, generated from credit products like loans and mortgages, and interest expenses. The outgoing interest includes the money it pays to those who hold savings accounts and certificates of deposit (CDs). The margin is expressed as a percentage and indicates the firm’s ability to make profits. Prospective investors use it to determine whether to invest in the firm.
O
- Ommer Block
Ommer blocks are two blocks that are created and submitted at the same time, approximately, on the Ethereum network. Only one of two such blocks can find a place on the ledger. They are also known as Uncle Blocks. While the concept is similar to orphan blocks, the creators of such blocks are rewarded in the Ethereum system through transaction fees.
- Opening Cross
The opening cross is a method Nasdaq uses to determine the opening price for an individual share on its exchange. It reflects any changes in sentiment and price since the closing of the market on the previous day. The process involves accumulating data on the buy and sell interest among market participants for a particular security two minutes before the market opens. All investors can view this information.
- Ordinals
Ordinals is a project that enables the possibility of Bitcoin-based NFTs—a new use case for Bitcoin. How does it do this? By creating a system for tracking individual satoshis on the Bitcoin blockchain. Like Ethereum-based NFTs, each Ordinal is an immutable and complete digital artifact. So they cannot be tampered with and secure ownership rights. Unlike traditional NFTs, which are minted, Ordinals are inscribed. Software engineer Casey Rodarmor launched the project in January 2021.
P
- Paid-In Capital
Paid-in capital is the amount of cash or other assets that shareholders have given the company in exchange for stock. This includes par value as well as any amount paid in excess. To find the paid-in capital, see the equity section in the shareholders’ balance sheet. It serves as a significant source of capital for projects and can be used to offset losses.
- Participating Preferred Stock
Participating preferred stock is a type of preferred stock. It gives the holder the right to receive dividends equivalent to the customary rate of preferred dividends that preferred shareholders receive and an additional dividend. The additional dividend, which depends on some predetermined condition, ensures that these shareholders receive the same dividend as the regular shareholders. Such stocks can also mention preferences in the event of a liquidation.
- People Poison Pill
A people poison pill is a type of “poison pill.” That means it is a defensive strategy used by a company to prevent an unwanted takeover. The strategy involves the target company’s management team threatening to resign if the takeover goes ahead. It works if all employees responsible for the company’s success join forces and the acquirer is keen to retain them.
- Pip
“Pip” is short for “percentage in point” or “price interest point.” It refers to the smallest whole unit price move that an exchange rate can make on the basis of forex market convention. Most currency pairs are priced out to four decimal places. A pip is in the last/fourth decimal place. It is the equivalent of 1/100 of 1% or one basis point.
- Ponzi Scheme
A Ponzi scheme is essentially a type of fraudulent investing scam. In this scheme, the scammers promise high rates of return with little risk, but they simply give earlier investors returns from the money taken from later investors. When there are no more new investors flooding in, and there’s not enough money to continue, a Ponzi project will bottom out. In this, it is similar to pyramid schemes.
- Price Ceiling
A price ceiling is a type of price control that the law mandates. It refers to the maximum amount a seller can charge for a product or service. Price ceilings usually apply to staple products, such as food and energy products, when the masses begin to find them unaffordable.
- Purchase APR
Purchase Annual Percentage Rate (APR) is a credit card’s interest rate for purchases when there is some balance on the card. It is applied on a monthly basis. Most credit cards have several APRs attached, and a different purchase rate is common. The credit card company may change the APR on a credit card with a 45-day notice.
R
- Real Body
The broad part of a candle on a candlestick chart is called a real body. It covers the area and represents the difference between the opening price and the closing price within a specific time frame. If the open is lower than the close, the candle is often green or white in color. In the case of the converse, the candle is usually red or black.
S
- Simple Nightshade
NEAR Protocol decided to bring in a form of sharding in 2021. The sharding design it uses is different from the one Ethereum employs, and it goes by the name of Simple Nightshade. Sharding is like creating multiple checkout lines for transactions, instead of a single one, so with Nightshade, NEAR will be able to handle many more transactions per second. The design comprises three phases.
- Spinning Top Candlestick
A spinning top is a chart pattern used in technical analysis. It is candlestick pattern with a short real body that is vertically centered between long upper and lower shadows. This formation of this pattern suggests uncertainty in relation to the asset’s future course. With it, neither buyers nor sellers can gain the upper hand. Following a strong price move, spinning tops may hint at a potential price reversal if the next candle confirms it.
- Stale Block
Blocks that are mined but do not get accepted in/added to the blockchain are said to be stale. They are stale in the sense of “outdated” because when two blocks are mined simultaneously, and one is delayed by a lag in block acceptance, the latter gets rendered obsolete. Such blocks are legitimate but are not part of a blockchain. They are also known as orphan blocks.
- State Channel
State channels are Layer-2 scaling solutions that let users transact off-chain, thus limiting their interaction with the main chain. Users can only engage with the main chain twice—first, to open the channel and the second time while closing it. Their reduced reliance on the main chain creates the scope for faster transactions.
T
- The DAO
Launched in 2016, The DAO was the world’s first decentralized autonomous organization. The developers created The DAO to serve as a decentralized venture capital fund, thus eliminating human error in fund management. The DAO directed its efforts toward capitalizing Ether initially. Unfortunately, the DAO was hacked after a few months, and it had to go defunct.
- Time-Weighted Automated Market Maker (TWAMM)
Short for Time-Weighted Automated Market Maker, TWAMM is an algorithm that helps traders execute large orders without negatively affecting the price. It does this by breaking up the orders over a period of time via an AMM. Relying on arbitrageurs, these algorithms trade against AMMs to ensure that the price returns to its market value. If one broke up the trades manually instead, it would be time-consuming, and the gas fee would be higher.
- Token Generation Event (TGE)
A Token Generation Event or a TGE is an event where a dApp developer publicly releases individual tokens into the market. It is similar to an ICO in terms of its purpose, but some companies prefer to brand their fundraising campaigns as TGEs due to regulation-related concerns.
- Token Lockup
Token lockup is the locking up of tokens for a specific period. During the lockup phase, no transactions are allowed. Also called the vesting period, it helps projects achieve price stability and protects them against liquidity issues.
- Token Sales
A token sale is the initial offering of a token to a private pool of investors before it officially hits the market. Token sales allow developers to introduce investors to their projects in the early stages and attract funding. The crypto’s white paper usually has details of token sales. ICOs are a type of token sale.
- Toll Bridge
A toll bridge is a type of bridge that runs on a smart contract. The smart contract handles bridge burns and claims, which include vesting schedules and TGEs. Toll wallets get their name from the fact that a toll fee is necessary to unlock access to their extra functionalities, such as vesting.
- Treasury Bond (T-Bond)
The Treasury Bond (T-Bond) is a debt security issued by the United States’ Treasury Department. By investing in a T-Bond, one is essentially loaning money to help the federal government meet its expenses. In return, one gets paid interest on a semiannual basis until the bonds mature or are repurchased by the government. Unlike T-Bills, T-Bonds come with a longer maturity date.
U
- Uncle Block
Uncle blocks are two blocks that are created and submitted at the same time, approximately, on the Ethereum network. Only one of two such blocks can find a place on the ledger. They are also known as Ommer Blocks. While the concept is similar to orphan blocks, the creators of such blocks are rewarded in the Ethereum system through transaction fees.
- Unconfirmed Transaction
A transaction that has not been verified and recorded on the blockchain yet is known as an Unconfirmed Transaction. Zero-Confirmation Transaction is another name for a transaction of this type. Before the block is mined, the initiator of the unconfirmed transaction is the only one who knows of its existence.
V
- Value Stock
A value stock refers to shares of a company that appears to trade at a lower price than its fundamentals would lead us to believe it is worth. The fundamentals to assess its worth may include dividends, earnings, or sales. Because investors have an unfavorable view of the company, a value stock typically has a bargain price.
- Verification Code
A verification code is a security protection method that prevents internet bots from abusing or spamming online services. It is like a captcha or the code that service providers send when you log in via a new device. Such codes are commonly used in banking and crypto accounts as part of their two-factor authentication systems.
- Virgin Bitcoin
A Virgin Bitcoin, as the name suggests, is a bitcoin that has never been spent. In other words, it has been received by a miner as part of the block mining reward and has not yet changed hands. It can only be via P2P trading. Despite attempts to market some bitcoins as virgin bitcoins, no market has emerged for them so far.
W
- What is Burn address?
A burn address is an address used as part of the crypto burn mechanism. It is essentially an inaccessible digital wallet. The burnt address does not belong to any user, and no one can guess its private key. Transferring tokens to a burn address removes them from circulation. It is also sometimes called an eater address.
- Whitelist
A whitelist is essentially a list of participants for an event. In finance, the term refers to those chosen to participate in an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) or an Initial Exchange Offering (IEO). Its use helps limit entry to those who meet some qualifying criteria—such as some minimum holdings.
X
Y
Z
- ZK Rollups
Zero Knowledge Rollups, also known as ZK Rollups, are a Layer-2 scalability solution for Layer-1 blockchains. They help make transactions on blockchains faster while keeping the gas fee minimal. They work by “rolling up” transactions and executing them off-chain. This moving of computation and state storage off the main chain is what helps speed up transactions.
- ZK-SNARKs
ZK-SNARKs is short for Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge. It is a type of zero-knowledge protocol used in encryption. So it allows one party to prove its possession of some information without disclosing that information. ZK-SNARKs are called non-interactive because the prover and the verifier do not need to interact. They offer users more privacy than protocols of traditional cryptos like Bitcoin.