Online Google Dictionary

whipsaw 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈ(h)wipˌsô/,
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whipsaws, plural;
  1. Cut with a whipsaw
    • - he was whipsawing lumber
  2. Subject to two difficult situations or opposing pressures at the same time
    • - the army has been whipsawed by a shrinking budget and a growing pool of recruits
  3. Compel to do something

  4. Subject to a double loss, as when buying a security before the price falls and selling before the price rises

  5. Cheat or beat (someone) in two ways at once or by the collusion of two others

Noun
  1. A saw with a narrow blade and a handle at both ends, used typically by two people


  1. two-handed saw: a saw with handles at both ends; intended for use by two people
  2. victimize, especially in gambling or negotiations
  3. saw with a whipsaw
  4. A saw pit or sawpit is a pit over which lumber is positioned to be sawed with a long two-handled saw by two men, one standing above the timber and the other below. and at TheFreeDictionary. ...
  5. a crosscut saw operated by two people; to operate a whipsaw; to lose potential profit by buying shares just before the price falls, or by selling them just before the price rises; to defeat someone in two different ways at once
  6. (Whipsaws) Unlike the other trading methods that use crosses of the moving averages, Kolachi Method has a very low possibility of encountering the whipsaws of the market fluctuations. The main reason behind this assumption is the big difference in the periods of two moving averages. ...
  7. slang for a condition of a highly volatile market where a sharp price movement is quickly followed by a sharp reversal.
  8. Term for where a trader takes a position, then has to move against it triggering stop loss limits and liquidation of positions, then having to move in the original direction. Normally occurs in volatile markets.
  9. A whipsaw occurs when a buy or sell signal is reversed in a short time. Volatile markets and sensitive indicators can cause whipsaws. ...
  10. To raise before, and after, a caller who gets caught in the middle.
  11. Term used to describe sharp price movements and reversals in the market. A whipsaw would be if shortly after you bought a stock the price plummeted.
  12. Refers to a sharp adverse price movement, or market reversals, perhaps taking place shortly after execution.
  13. Losing money on both sides of a price swing.
  14. The official 107ist fanzine, written by the fans for the fans. Can be purchased from the TA Merch Van and at tailgates prior to home matches.
  15. a double play, a two victory win, or a triumph over two opponents is called a "whipsaw"; therefore, being simultaneously attacked by two adversaries is to be "whipsawed", or double teamed. Compare HAT TRICK.
  16. A situation wherein after a trader takes a long position, prices drops down. Or, after a trader takes a short position, prices climbs up.
  17. slang for a movement where the price sees a sudden and sharp movement with an immediate reversal.
  18. To bet and raise aggressively on both sides of a calling player.
  19. A term for what happens when the market trends point toward a specific direction, causing a buy or sell and then the opposite effect occurs.
  20. When a player is caught in the middle between two raisers and must call each bet because of the pot odds.
  21. is a condition where a security's price heads in one direction, but then is followed quickly by a movement in the opposite direction. The origins of term are derived from the push and pull action used by lumberjacks to cut wood with a type of saw with the same name.
  22. Generally occurs in a volatile market where price fluctuates up and down for a period of time until specific direction is taken.
  23. Rapid reversal of trading signals
  24. a long narrow 2-handed saw.
  25. term used to describe what has happened to traders that have had stop orders executed as a result of volatile market swings. The traders' intentions were for the stop orders to be executed on market movements indicative of a sustained trend.