- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Score Board
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- SEC Score Board
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
Question about limit orders
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:20 am
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:20 am
I purchased an OTC market ETf this morning, which my brokerage account does not accept market orders for. Assuming the price was to rise today, I set my limit order higher than the current market price. When it was filled, it was filled at the limit price, even though the current price of the ETF had not reached that amount. I know the limit is the max amount that I am willing to pay, but it is normal for the brokerage account to execute it at the maximum price, and not "or better" prices. Thanks is advance guys.
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:26 am to bayoubengal2007
quote:
, I set my limit order higher than the current market price.
yea don't do this
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:39 am to bayoubengal2007
quote:No. At least not with my online broker, Schwab.
but it is normal for the brokerage account to execute it at the maximum price, and not "or better" prices.
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:41 am to rocket31
It has surpassed the price now, I just didn't expect that to happen, because I never used limit orders before. Thanks rocket
Posted on 1/6/21 at 9:43 am to LSURussian
Good to know, Russian, I'll keep an eye out in the future. I have a brokerage with ally invest and a 401k with Fidelity. I didn't have the same problem with Fidelity
Posted on 1/6/21 at 11:37 am to bayoubengal2007
quote:
which my brokerage account does not accept market orders for.
That’s a new one on me. I’ve never seen that before.
But why would one set a limit order ABOVE the market price?
Posted on 1/6/21 at 12:17 pm to bayoubengal2007
quote:
purchased an OTC market ETf this morning, which my brokerage account does not accept market orders for.
Was this in premarket?
Posted on 1/6/21 at 12:50 pm to CajunTiger92
Yes it was in premarket. I set it slightly above because I wanted the order to go through and no be cancelled or partially filled
Posted on 1/6/21 at 8:15 pm to bayoubengal2007
You should have the option to purchase at market price.
Posted on 1/6/21 at 8:37 pm to bayoubengal2007
Market orders are only valid for regular market hours. You can’t use a market order for extended trading hours. The spreads are typically larger in extended trading, particularly if you are trading a low volume stock or etf. Market makers do not participate in extended hours and there is less liquidity in the market. Sounds like you wanted the stock, wanted the trade to execute and you bought it at a price you were willing to pay. So the market worked.
Posted on 1/7/21 at 1:53 am to bayoubengal2007
What broker did you use? What is the ticker symbol of the ETF? What was your limit price?
You shouldn't use market orders. I've seen people get hosed on pricing when using market orders.
You shouldn't use market orders. I've seen people get hosed on pricing when using market orders.
Posted on 1/7/21 at 10:57 am to tigerfan4444
The buy was for GBTC on Ally invest.
Posted on 1/7/21 at 4:16 pm to bayoubengal2007
Seems like a violation of Reg BI, but you’d have to do some research on that to verify
Posted on 1/7/21 at 4:23 pm to bayoubengal2007
How much was the difference from the market price to your limit ?
Posted on 1/8/21 at 3:45 am to bayoubengal2007
quote:FWIW, doubtful this had anything to do with your limit order per se. Essentially you placed a market order.
It has surpassed the price now, I just didn't expect that to happen, because I never used limit orders before.
As you probably know, market transactions are a bid-ask basis. Bids fall below current stock price. Asks are above. In volatile markets or instances of lower trade activity, bid-ask spreads can be considerable.
The risk of market orders is your order getting matched with higher than market asks. That's likely what happened here, and though it may not have been as obvious, you've gotten tagged with similar costs in other of your market order transactions.
That's fine if your goal is solely to commit to a position. But to avoid over market price risk, place purchase limits at the current price or lower. e.g., I can't recall the last time I placed a market order, if ever. Occasionally though, as you alluded, you'll get stuck with a partial position.
This post was edited on 1/8/21 at 4:54 am
Popular
Back to top
7







