Mar 5th, 2006, 16:51 | 只看该作者 #63 |
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关于几种order的不同
A limit order guarantees a price but not an execution. Use the entry box to specify the maximum you are willing to pay (if this is a buy order) or the minimum you are willing to accept (if this is a sell order). Limit orders are placed to guarantee you will not sell a stock for less than the limit price, or buy for more than the limit price, provided that your order is executed. Of course, you might never buy or sell, but if you do, you are guaranteed that price or better. For example, if you want to buy XYZ if it drops down to $30, you can place a limit buy @ $30. If the price falls to $30 the broker will attempt to buy it for $30. If it goes up immediately afterwards you might miss out. Similarly you might want to sell your stock if it goes up to $40, so you place a limit sell @ $40. A market order executes at the best price available when the order reaches the exchange. Market orders guarantee an execution (subject to the availability or liquidity of the security) but do not guarantee an execution at a specific price. Please remember that the price at which your order is finally executed could well be different from the price quoted just before you placed your order. A stop market order = stop order becomes a market order when the stock price reaches the price you specify in the entry box. Buy Stop Order ― Investors typically use a stop order when buying stock to limit a loss or protect a profit on short sales. The order is entered at a stop price that is always above the current market price. Sell Stop Order ― A sell stop order helps investors to avoid further losses or to protect a profit that exists if a stock price continues to drop. A stop order to sell is always placed below the current market price. Stop-loss orders: A stop-loss order, as the name suggests, is designed to stop a loss. If you bought a stock and worry about it falling too low, you might place a stop-loss sell order at $20 to sell that stock when the price hits $20. If the next trade after it hits $20 is 19 1/2, then you would sell at 19 1/2. In effect the stop loss sell turns into a market order as soon as the exchange price hits that figure. A stop limit order is a regular stop order that becomes a limit order rather than a market order when the stock reaches the stop price. Use the entry box to specify the price at which you want your order to become a limit order. Stop-limit Order A stop order is an order that becomes executable once a set price has been reached and is filled at the current market price. A limit order is one that limits the entry or exit price to a set price or better. By combining the two orders it prevents the stop order from being executed at the market price which could be much different than what the investor originally wanted by putting a limit on the price. For example lets assume that ABC Inc. is trading at $40 and an investor has put in a stop-limit order to buy at $45. If the price of ABC Inc. moves above $45 the stop order to buy the security becomes executable but because their is also a limit order attached it limits the price that the shares can be purchased to $45 or less. In terms of buying a stock it allows investors to buy when the stock has upward momentum behind (moving from $40 to $45). Example: Let's combine a stop loss with a limit sell and a day order. XYZ - Stop-Loss Sell Limit @ 30 - Day Order Only The day order part is simple -- the order expires at the end of the day. The stop-loss sell portion by itself would convert to a sell at market if the price drops down to $30. But since it is a stop-loss sell limit order, it converts to a limit order @ $30 if the price drops to $30. It is possible the price drops to 29 1/2 and doesn't come back to $30 and so you never do sell the stock. Note the difference between a limit sell @ $30 and a stop-loss sell limit @ $30 -- the first will sell at market if the price is anywhere above $30. The second will not convert to a sell order (a limit order in this case) until the price drops to $30. |
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Mar 6th, 2006, 00:15 | 只看该作者 #64 |
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1. stop lose limit sell 和stop limit sell的区别是? 是一回事 执行时,选 sell ,然后选: stop limit 2. 如果现在股票价格是34,我想在30设个止损价,用什么命令? 方法1: 选 sell ,然后选: stop limit 设置 $30 首先,价位必须从 $34 降到 $30, 然后在 $30 或 高于 $30 的任何价位成交(此处需要 一个向上的反弹, 即在 limit $30 成交) 若从 $34 降到 $30后,没有机会马上成交,然后股价 一路下降为 29.9 29.8 29.5 28.9 .... ,你便没有 机会再成交了。 It is possible the price drops to 29 1/2 and doesn't come back to $30 and so you never do sell the stock. 方法2: 选 sell ,然后选: stop 设置 $30 首先,价位必须从 $34 降到 $30, 然后在 $30 或 低于 $30 的任何价位成交(market price 成交) 3. 如果用stop market 又会怎么样? 和上面 方法2 同 |
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Apr 29th, 2006, 01:36 | 只看该作者 #66 |
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9.99看来是各broker商量好的了,要想得到这个价格你得玩命的trade。这不刚刚又发现一个:http://www.questrade.com/fees/fees_stocks_options.html 而且号称为Canadian量身定做。交易平台看上去也不错(起码比TD的强),免费注册可以试玩。 |
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May 1st, 2006, 01:22 | 只看该作者 #69 | |
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引用:
我早在etrade开了户,可惜什么优惠都没享受到啊! |
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May 1st, 2006, 01:29 | 只看该作者 #70 | |
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May 3rd, 2006, 02:32 | 只看该作者 #75 |
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我昨天打电话问了,以前comission fee是26.99/trade,所以rebate有26.99,现在是19.99/trade,如果上一季度交易满30次的话,下一季度就是9.99/trade。如果你存25000,就有100 trade free,每个trade以9.99算,时限2个月,交易满了100次的maximum rebate是999。 power etrade 不能用到年底,除非能维持30 trade/quater. 不知道他们能用到年底有没有条件,反正我问了半天是有条件的。 至于你不够钱就不知道了,你恐怕得打电话问etrade才行。不过你可以先开户,等钱够了再给他们说就行了。 |
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May 19th, 2006, 00:23 | 只看该作者 #79 | |
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我的情况和你类似
交易不会很频繁,但现在用的TD WATERHOUSE交易费用实在太高,特别是做低价股,要1.5%每笔最少29, 即使只有5000块的资金做一个买卖来回就至少150刀没有了 引用:
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俺叫CEO,Chief Eating Officer, 中文叫做主吃人
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