Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A limit order tells your broker to buy or sell an asset at an indicated limit price or better. A stop order initiates a market order, which tells your broker to buy or sell at the best...
A stop order is one of the three main order types you will encounter in the market: stop, market, and limit. A stop order is always executed in the direction that the price is moving.
The stop price dictates the price whether the order is triggered, then the limit price dictates the price at which the order is filled. Stop-limit orders offer risk management, automation,...
A stop order is an order to buy or sell a stock at the market price once the stock has traded at or through a specified price (the "stop price"). If the stock reaches the stop price, the order becomes a live market order and is typically filled at the next available market price.
There are three types of stop orders: stop market, stop limit, and trailing stop. If the investor in this example uses a stop-market order, when the trigger price or lower is reached, an order will be placed to sell the stock at the next available price.
A stop order is an order to buy or sell a stock at the market price once the stock has traded at or through a specified price (the "stop").
A stop order (sometimes called a ‘stop-loss order’) is when an investor sets a specific stop-price on a stock (not necessarily in their portfolio). If that stop price is reached, an order...
Here's how it works: first, you set a stop price, which triggers the order to become active once the market price reaches or falls below this specified level. Then, they establish a limit...
Compared to a stop-limit, a stop loss order triggers a market order to buy or sell once the stop price is reached. Since market orders are indiscriminate on price, stop-loss orders almost...
A stop order is an order to buy or sell a stock once the price of the stock reaches a specified price, known as the stop price. When the specified price is reached, your stop order becomes a market order. The advantage of a stop order is you don't have to monitor how a stock is performing on a daily basis.