Market Order

Market Order

Table of Contents What Is a Market Order? Understanding Market Orders Market Order vs. Limit Order Real World Example Special Considerations Market Order FAQs A market order is an instruction by an investor to a broker to buy or sell stock shares, bonds, or other assets at the best available price in the current financial market. A limit order, which instructs the broker to buy or sell only at a certain price, is the main alternative to the market order for most individual investors. Any time a trader seeks to execute a market order, the trader is willing to buy at the asking price or sell at the bid price. A limit order allows an investor to set a maximum acceptable purchase price amount or a minimum acceptable sales price while placing an order.

What Is a Market Order?

A market order is an instruction by an investor to a broker to buy or sell stock shares, bonds, or other assets at the best available price in the current financial market.

It is the default choice for buying and selling for most investors most of the time. If the asset is a large-cap stock or a popular exchange-traded fund (ETF), there will be plenty of willing buyers and sellers out there. That means that a market order will be completed nearly instantaneously at a price very close to the latest posted price that the investor can see.

A limit order, which instructs the broker to buy or sell only at a certain price, is the main alternative to the market order for most individual investors.

Understanding Market Orders

If you use an online broker, clicking on the "buy" or "sell" button generally calls up an order form that the user is required to fill in. It needs to know the stock symbol, whether you're buying or selling, and how many shares. It also asks for a price type.

The default price type is generally "market." That makes it a market order. The investor is not setting a price but is indicating a willingness to pay the current market price.

There are other options, including "market on close," which indicates that you want the transaction at the last possible moment in the session, and "limit," which allows you to buy only at or below a set price or sell only at or above a set price.

The market on close option is for people who think they'll get the best price of the day at the end of the day. The limit order allows you to walk away from your laptop confident that an opportunity won't be missed.

If you think a stock will hit a level you find acceptable soon, try a limit order. If you're wrong, the transaction won't take place.

Why Use a Market Order

A market order is the most common and straightforward transaction in the markets. It is meant to be executed as quickly as possible at the current asking price, and it is the choice of most stock buyers and sellers most of the time. That's why it's the default option.

The market order is usually the lowest-priced option as well. Some brokers charge more for transactions that involve limit orders.

The market order is a safe option for any large-cap stock, because they are highly liquid. That is, there's a huge number of their shares changing hands at any given moment during the trading day. The transaction goes through immediately. Unless the market is wildly unsettled at that moment, the price displayed when you click on "buy" or "sell" will be nearly identical to the price you get.

Downside of a Market Order

The market order is less reliable when trading less liquid investments, such as small-cap stocks in obscure or troubled companies. Because these stocks are thinly traded, the bid-ask spreads tend to be wide. As a result, market orders can get filled slowly and at disappointing prices.

Market Order vs. Limit Order

Market orders are the most basic buy and sell trades. Limit orders give greater control to the investor.

A limit order allows an investor to set a maximum acceptable purchase price amount or a minimum acceptable sales price while placing an order. The order will be processed only if the asset hits that price.

Limit orders are preferable in a number of circumstances:

Limit orders are commonly used by professional traders and day traders who may be making a profit by buying and selling huge quantities of shares very quickly in order to exploit tiny changes in their prices.

Transactions in big-cap stocks like Apple and Microsoft tend to be fulfilled nearly instantaneously and without issue. Smaller and more obscure stocks might not.

Example of a Market Order

Say the bid-ask prices for shares of Excellent Industries are $18.50 and $20, respectively, with 100 shares available at the ask. If a trader places a market order to buy 500 shares, the first 100 will execute at $20.

The following 400, however, will be filled at the best asking price for sellers of the next 400 shares. If the stock is very thinly traded, the next 400 shares might be executed at $22 or more.

This is why it’s a good idea to use limit orders for some transactions. Market orders are filled at a price dictated by the market. Limit orders give more control to the trader. as opposed to limit or stop orders, which provide traders more control.

Special Considerations

Any time a trader seeks to execute a market order, the trader is willing to buy at the asking price or sell at the bid price. Thus, the person conducting a market order is immediately giving up the bid-ask spread.

For this reason, it’s a good idea to look closely at the bid-ask spread before placing a market order — especially for thinly traded securities. Failure to do so can be costly. This is doubly important for people who trade frequently or use anyone utilizing an automated trading system.

Market Order FAQs

Here are the answers to some commonly asked questions about market orders.

What does market order mean?

A market order directs a broker to buy or sell shares of an asset at the prevailing market price. It is the most common way to buy or sell stocks for most investors most of the time.

How does a market order work?

A market order by definition is an instruction for immediate purchase or sale at the current price. It's a bit like buying a product without negotiating. However, in the financial markets, a fair price at any given moment is determined by the vast volume of sell and buy orders being resolved. You'll get the price that is fair at that moment.

Traders have the option of making it a limit order rather than a market order.

What is the difference between a market order and a limit order?

A limit order sets a specific maximum price at which the investor is willing to buy or a specific minimum price at which the investor will sell. The limit order will sit there until it is fulfilled or it expires.

In an online buy or sell order, the "good for day" option will cancel the order at the market close if the price is not met.

What is a batch order vs. a market order?

A batch order is a behind-the-scenes transaction conducted by brokerages. At the start of the trading day, they combine various orders for the same stocks and push them through as if they were a single transaction. Batch trading is permitted only at the opening of the market and only with orders placed between trading sessions.

Each batch order will consist of a number of market orders, sent through sometime between that day's session and the previous close.

Related terms:

At-the-Market

An at-the-market order buys or sells a stock or futures contract at the prevailing market bid or ask price at the time it gets processed. read more

Batch Trading

Batch trading refers to an accumulation of orders that are executed simultaneously. read more

Bid-Ask Spread

A bid-ask spread is the amount by which the ask price exceeds the bid price for an asset in the market. read more

Box-Top Order

A box-top order is an order to buy or sell the best market price.  read more

Broker and Example

A broker is an individual or firm that charges a fee or commission for executing buy and sell orders submitted by an investor. read more

Day Trader

Day traders execute short and long trades to capitalize on intraday market price action, which result from temporary supply and demand inefficiencies. read more

Forex (FX) , Uses, & Examples

Forex (FX) is the market for trading international currencies. The name is a portmanteau of the words foreign and exchange. read more

Hit The Bid

Hit the bid is a buzzword used to describe an event where a broker or trader agrees to sell at a bid price quoted by another broker or trader. read more

Large Cap (Big Cap)

Large cap (big cap) refers to a company with a market capitalization value of more than $10 billion. read more

Limit Order

A limit order is used to buy or sell a security at a pre-determined price and will not execute unless the security's price meets those qualifications. read more