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GlossaryMarkets & assets

Asset schedule

The days and hours when a broker makes a specific asset available for new contracts.

Binary options glossary definition visual
Direct answer

Where this term appears

This term may appear in the asset list, chart header, market schedule, symbol information, price-source note, or contract history. Match the symbol and timestamp before comparing it with an external chart.

Use the definition above together with the exact value, condition, timestamp, account, product, or payment context shown by the broker.

Do not confuse

How Asset schedule differs from related terms

Asset schedule is often researched beside Broker-created price and After-hours session and Digits options. The labels can appear in the same workflow, but they do not describe the same field or condition.

01
Broker-created price

A quote stream calculated or supplied by the broker rather than taken directly from a clearly identified external market source.

02
After-hours session

A trading period after an exchange's core session has closed. If a broker offers the asset then, check whether it uses live extended-hours pricing or another source.

03
Digits options

Broker-specific digital contracts settled using the last digit of a final recorded tick rather than ordinary market direction.

Practical use

Place the term inside the broker workflow where it matters

Asset schedule means the days and hours when a broker makes a specific asset available for new contracts. A glossary definition becomes useful when it is connected to the exact contract, account, payment, market-data, platform, or legal step in which the broker uses it.

A neutral example

Record where the term appears, the value or state beside it, the rule that changes it, the account or product scope, the date observed, and the evidence retained after the task is complete.

01
Published meaning

Broker definition and applicable terms.

02
Observed state

Dated account, product, platform, or payment screen.

03
Consequence

What changes for settlement, access, cash movement, support, or risk.

In a broker review

How to use Asset schedule in a comparison

In a broker review, do not read Asset schedule in isolation. Match the broker's own definition to the relevant contract, account, pricing, payment, or platform screen and record the condition that changes its meaning.

Comparison context

Why it matters when comparing brokers

How to use this term

Asset count is meaningful only when the underlying market, price source, trading hours, and weekend or after-hours treatment are clear. Separate real-market references from broker-priced OTC instruments and proprietary synthetic markets.

What it does not prove

A recognizable asset name does not guarantee that two brokers use the same market venue, bid/ask basis, trading session, or settlement price source.

Broker checklist

What to verify

Check these points on the broker's product screen, account flow, terms, or help pages.

01
Underlying market

Confirm the underlying instrument, currency pair, index, commodity, stock, or crypto reference.

02
Market-data source

Look for a named venue, provider, benchmark, or clearly explained proprietary model.

03
Trading availability

Check regular sessions, weekends, holidays, maintenance, and after-hours availability.

04
Market type

Distinguish real-market, OTC, derived, and synthetic symbols before comparing coverage.

Quick answers

Common questions

Short answers for users comparing binary options brokers and account conditions.

What is Asset schedule commonly compared with?

Asset schedule is commonly compared with Broker-created price. Broker-created price means: A quote stream calculated or supplied by the broker rather than taken directly from a clearly identified external market source.

Why does this term matter when comparing brokers?

Asset count is meaningful only when the underlying market, price source, trading hours, and weekend or after-hours treatment are clear. Separate real-market references from broker-priced OTC instruments and proprietary synthetic markets.

What should I check when comparing this feature?

A recognizable asset name does not guarantee that two brokers use the same market venue, bid/ask basis, trading session, or settlement price source. Check the broker's definition, applicable terms, and account or product screen before relying on the label.