Market Order
A market order is no better than a request that some random trader (the person on the other side of your trade) take some of your money — without so much as a 'thank you." Why is that true? Because a market order is one that must be filled as quickly as possible. No negotiation takes place. With computers running the trading world, the only way to get an immediate execution of your order is for the system to match your buy order with an existing offer to sell the specific option (or any other asset) that you want to buy. Sure, the system finds the lowest published price that is available, but that price is going to be the ask price that you saw when entering the order.
For those of you who remember that trading was not always done via computers: Some years ago, your order was represented by a real person who entered the trading pit, announced the option he/she wanted to buy, and was greeted with a bunch of verbal bids and offers.
The broker than would counter the offers with a slightly lower price — giving the pit traders the opportunity to sell at that price. If no one made the sale, the broker then filled the market order by paying the ask price. NOTE: The broker did not take much time doing this because the order was a market order — and that did not give the broker the authority to take much time in negotiating for a better price. But, at least there was a chance for a better fill. That is no longer the case when the order is executed via computers.
Your order is executed quickly. However, it is possible for the market to change just as you click to send in the order. In other words, the fill may occur at a slightly lower price than anticipated when buying, and it is equally possible that you pay a bit more than expected.
This is how the system works and no one is cheating the customer. Market orders are filled at the best possible available ask price — when the order hits the marketplace — and that ask price changes from time to time.
You may ask, what is wrong with that? Isn't the ask price the lowest price at which the option can be bought, as the instant that the order arrives in the marketplace? The answer is that there is plenty wrong with that because the bid/ask quote that you see on your computer screen is known as the published bid/ask price. It is also referred to as the outside market. And that published market is frequently quite different from the true market.
Unless the bid/ask quote is very tight (i.e., $0.01 or $0.02 wide), there is almost always someone who is willing to sell options at a price that is lower than the advertised asking price. And that price represents the true asking price. If you wonder why that seller does not advertise his/her intentions, there are two good reasons:
Note that the wider the bid ask spread (i.e., instead of .31 bid// .33 ask, the market is .29 bid//.35 ask) the greater the chances that you can sell above the bid and buy below the ask.
The only time that it is appropriate to enter a market order occurs when it is essential that you make the trade immediately. And there is almost never any good reason to do that.
Limit Order
A limit order is one that establishes a maximum purchase price or minimum selling price. Instead of your order being filled at the best available price, your order is filled if and only if it can be filled at your limit price, or better.
Let's see how this works. Let's say that you want to buy some XYZ Dec 16, 2016, 50 calls. NOTE: This call option gives its owner the right to buy 100 shares of the underlying asset (XYZ stock) at the strike price ($50 per share) at any time before the options expire (shortly after the close of trading on Dec 16, 2016.)
The market is $1.00 bid and $1.20 ask.
Keep in mind that this idea will prove beneficial often enough that every trader should adopt this idea. Remember, if you decide that (using the above example) $1.15 is all you want to pay, then enter the order and do not raise your bid.
If you are willing to pay $1.20, and if the bid/ask spread is more than 5-cents wide, it pays to try to get your order filled at a better price. In the example, you could begin with a bid of $1.10, hoping for the best. Then, after 15 seconds, I suggest raising the bid to $1.15. After another minute or so, you have a choice. If you need this trade because of an existing position, then by all means bid that $1.20. Don't be stubborn when the trade is required to hedge some existing portfolio risk. But if this is a new position, you will have to decide between being stubborn and paying a price that you are truly willing to pay.
The point of this discussion is that it is foolish to enter market orders when trading options. This is especially true when the options are in their opening rotation at the start of the trading day — because buy and sell orders are filled haphazardly when the markets are busy. In earlier times there was a "one-price" opening where all orders were filled at the same price during the opening rotation. However, that is one more innovative trading idea that disappeared when computers replaced live traders.
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1. What is a limit order in stock trading? |
2. How does a limit order differ from a market order? |
3. What are the advantages of using a limit order? |
4. Are there any disadvantages of using a limit order? |
5. How can investors decide whether to use a limit order or a market order? |
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