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The market order is the most frequently used order. It is a very good order to use once you
have made a decision about opening or closing a position. It can keep the customer from having
to chase a market trying to get in or out of a position. The market order is executed at the
best possible price obtainable at the time the order reaches the trading pit.
The Limit Order
The limit order is an order to buy or sell at a designated price. Limit Orders to buy are
placed below the market while limit orders to sell are placed above the market. Since the
market may never get high enough or low enough to trigger a limit order, a customer may miss
the market if he uses a limit order. (Even though you may see the market touch a limit price
several times, this does not guarantee or earn the customer a fill at that price. In most
instances, the market must trade BETTER than the limit price for the customer to get a fill.)
OR Better
The pit broker is obligated to get the best possible price for the customer. Putting an OB on
an order does not cause him to work harder. If the price is NOT OB, the broker is irritated
because he is paying special attention to a ticket that does not deserve it. Think of OB as
MARKET with a LIMIT. If the price does not have an OB next to it, and the market is considerably
better, the pit broker may question the runner to see if the order should have been a stop.
They will return the order for clarification which could delay the filling of the order and
possibly change the results of the fill. ONLY USE "OR BETTER" IF THE MARKET IS "OR BETTER."
Market If Touched (MIT)
MITs are the opposite of stop orders. Buy MITs are placed below the market and Sell MITs are
placed above the market. An MIT order is usually used to enter the market or initiate a trade.
An MIT order is similar to a limit order in that a specific price is placed on the order.
However, an MIT order becomes a market order once the limit price is touched or passed through.
An execution may be at, above, or below the originally specified price. An MIT order will not
be executed if the market fails to touch the MIT specified price.
Stop Orders
Stop orders can be used for three purposes:
- to minimize a loss on a long or short position,
- to protect a profit on an existing long or short position, or
- to initiate a new long or short position.
A buy stop order is placed above the market and a sell stop order is placed below the market.
Once the stop price is touched, the order is treated like a market order and will be filled at
the best possible price.
Stop Limit Orders
A stop limit order lists two prices and is an attempt to gain more control over the price at
which your stop is filled. The first part of the order is written like the above stop order.
The second part of the order specifies a limit price. This indicates that once your stop is
triggered, you do not wish to be filled beyond the limit price. Stop limit orders should
usually not be used when trying to exit a position. If a customer does not give a limit price,
then the stop price and the limit price are meant to be identical.
Stop Close Orders
The stop price on a stop close only will only be triggered if the market touches the stop during
the close of trading. The disadvantage of this order is a fast market in the last few minutes
of trading may cause the order to be filled at an undesirable price. It can, however, protect
the customer from getting filled during adverse price fluctuations during the course of the day.
Market on Opening
This is an order that the customer wishes to be executed during the opening range of trading at
the best possible price obtainable within the opening range. Not all exchanges recognize this
type of order. One such exchange is the Chicago Board of Trade.
Market on Close
This is an order that will be filled during the final seconds of trading at whatever price is
available. PLEASE NOTE: A FLOOR BROKER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REFUSE AN MOC ORDER UP TO FIFTEEN
MINUTES BEFORE THE CLOSE DEPENDING UPON MARKET CONDITIONS.
Fill or Kill
The fill or kill order is used by customers wishing an immediate fill, but at a specified
price. Our floor broker will bid or offer the order three times and immediately return either
a fill or an unable.
One Cancels the Other (OCO)
This is a combination of two orders written on one order ticket. This instructs our floor
personnel that once one side of the order is filled, the remaining side of the order should be
cancelled. By placing both instructions on one order, rather than two separate tickets, the
customer eliminates the possibility of a double fill. (This order is not acceptable on all
exchanges.)
Spread
The customer wishes to take a simultaneous long and short position in an attempt to profit via
the price differential or "spread" between two prices. A spread can be established between
different months of the same commodity, between related commodities or between the same or
related commodities traded on two different exchanges. A spread order can be entered at the
market or you can designate that you wish to be filled when the price difference between the
commodities reaches a certain point (or premium). For example: BUY 1 JUNE LIVE CATTLE, SELL 1
AUGUST LIVE CATTLE PLUS 100 TO THE AUGUST SELL SIDE. This means that the customer wants to
initiate or liquidate the spread when August Cattle is 100 points higher than June cattle.
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