Market Orders vs Pending Orders

Learn how to use instant execution, limit orders, and stop-entry orders to structure your trade execution.

Market Orders vs Pending Orders

Mastering how you enter the market is as important as knowing where to enter. Using the wrong order type can result in terrible entry prices or missed opportunities.

1. Market Orders (Instant Execution) A market order executes your trade immediately at the **best available current market price**. * **Pros**: Instant fill guarantee. * **Cons**: You may suffer **slippage** if the market is moving fast or liquidity is thin. The final entry price is not guaranteed.

2. Limit Orders (Pre-priced Entry) A limit order is an instruction to buy/sell at a **specific price or better**. * **Buy Limit**: Placed *below* the current market price. Executes only when price drops to your limit. * **Sell Limit**: Placed *above* the current market price. Executes only when price rises to your limit. * **Use Case**: Trading reversals at support or resistance.

3. Stop Orders (Trend Entry) A stop order is an instruction to buy/sell *after* the price breaks through a specific level. * **Buy Stop**: Placed *above* the current market price. Executes only if the price rises to your stop. * **Sell Stop**: Placed *below* the current market price. Executes only if the price drops to your stop. * **Use Case**: Breakout trading.

4. Stop-Limit Orders (Advanced Protection) Combines stop and limit mechanics. When the stop price is reached, it converts into a limit order rather than a market order, preventing execution if slippage is too extreme.

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Execution Slippage, Requotes & ECN Brokerage

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