Types of Orders
Before comparing alternative trading practices and com-
peting security markets, it is helpful to begin with an
overview of the types of trades an investor might wish to
have executed in these markets. Broadly speaking, there
are two types of orders: market orders and orders contin-
gent on price.
Market Orders
Market orders are buy or sell orders
that are to be executed immediately at current market
prices. For example, our investor might call her broker and
ask for the market price of FedEx. The broker might report back that the best bid price is $90
and the best ask price is $90.05, meaning that the investor would need to pay $90.05 to pur-
chase a share, and could receive $90 a share if she wished to sell some of her own holdings
of FedEx. The bid–ask spread in this case is $.05. So an order to buy 100 shares “at market”
would result in purchase at $90.05, and an order to “sell at market” would be executed at $90.
This simple scenario is subject to a few potential complications. First, the posted price
quotes actually represent commitments to trade up to a specified number of shares. If the
market order is for more than this number of shares, the order may be filled at multiple prices.
For example, if the ask price is good for orders up to 1,000 shares, and the investor wishes
to purchase 1,500 shares, it may be necessary to pay a slightly higher price for the last 500
shares. Figure 3.3 shows the average depth of the markets for shares of stock (i.e., the total
Many assets trade in more than one type of
market. What types of markets do the following
trade in?
a. Used cars
b. Paintings
c. Rare coins
CONCEPT CHECK
3.2
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How
Securities
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number of shares offered for trading at the
best bid and ask prices). Notice that depth
is considerably higher for the large stocks in
the S&P 500 than for the smaller stocks that
constitute the Russell 2000 index. Depth is
considered another component of liquidity.
Second, another trader may beat our investor
to the quote, meaning that her order would
then be executed at a worse price. Finally,
the best price quote may change before her
order arrives, again causing execution at a
price different from the one at the moment
of the order.
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