Tracking a Trade
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Tracking a trade
1. Tracking a trade
2. Your stock order
3. Stock price volatility
4. Processing the trade
Stock trade confirmation
Comparison
Clearing and settlement
Netting
Settling financial obligations
Protecting the trade
Book entry vs. stock certificates
Paperless stock transactions
5. The settlement timetable
6. Your brokerage account
 
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Book entry vs. stock certificates

There are three ways to hold stocks:
by having a physical certificate
in street name
and through a direct registration system (DRS)

Stock certificates still exist, just as cash does. If you want certificates for newly purchased stocks, some companies will provide them, though there may be a charge. You may have some certificates stored in a safe deposit box or you may have turned them over to your broker. The certificates you entrust to your broker and those certificates that banks hold when they serve as corporate transfer agents are stored in secure locations.

For example, more than 5.5 million certificates, worth more than $20 trillion, are stored in the DTC vaults. Those certificates represent 83% of all outstanding NYSE-listed shares and 72% of outstanding NASDAQ Stock Market shares.

On the books

Most brokerage firms prefer to hold your stocks in street name. And some stock-issuing companies will electronically register your ownership directly on their books or the books of their transfer agent and hold the security for you in book entry form. Both street-name registration and DRS allow your buy and sell orders to be handled more efficiently than if you hold paper certificates. And there's no risk of losing or misplacing them.
 
         
   
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