Tracking a Trade
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Tracking a trade
1. Tracking a trade
2. Your stock order
Clearing your stock trade
Where the stock is listed
Exchange execution
Market makers
National Market System
Internalized stock trades
3. Stock price volatility
4. Processing the trade
5. The settlement timetable
6. Your brokerage account
 
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Your stock order

When you've decided to buy or sell a stock, you call your stockbroker or financial adviser, or you enter your order using your online brokerage account. At that point you must also choose what type of order to give:
If you give a market order, you buy or sell a specific number of shares of stock at the price at which that stock is trading when the order is executed — usually close to the price that your broker reports as the market price when you give the order, or that you see on an electronic ticker. But the actual price could be higher or lower than you expected.
If you give a limit order to trade at a specific price, your order is held until it can be filled at that price or better. If you give a good 'til canceled order (GTC), it remains in effect until you withdraw it or your brokerage firm's execution deadline, if any, expires. If you give a day order, it lasts until the end of the day and will automatically be canceled if it's not executed.

What you may not know is how your order is translated into the result you want: either new shares of stock in your portfolio or more cash in your account. If you're curious, you can read on to follow the path of that trade.



 
Compare how the different types of orders are executed.
 
         
   
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