
Odd Lot Theory
The odd lot theory is a technical analysis hypothesis based on the assumption that the small individual investor is usually wrong and that individual investors are more likely to generate odd-lot sales. The odd lot theory is a technical analysis hypothesis based on the assumption that the small individual investor is usually wrong and that individual investors are more likely to generate odd-lot sales. Therefore, if odd lot sales are up and small investors are selling a stock, it is probably a good time to buy, and when odd-lot purchases are up, it may indicate a good time to sell. The odd lot theory focuses on following activities of individual investors trading in odd lots. While the odd lot theory implies that these investors may be more important to follow for trade signals, this concept has become less important to analysts over time.

What Is Odd Lot Theory?
The odd lot theory is a technical analysis hypothesis based on the assumption that the small individual investor is usually wrong and that individual investors are more likely to generate odd-lot sales. Therefore, if odd lot sales are up and small investors are selling a stock, it is probably a good time to buy, and when odd-lot purchases are up, it may indicate a good time to sell.




Understanding Odd Lot Theory
The odd lot theory focuses on following activities of individual investors trading in odd lots. This hypothesis also assumes that professional investors and traders tend to trade in round lot sizes (multiples of 100 shares), to improve pricing efficiency in their orders. Although this thinking was common lore from about 1950 until the end of the century, it has since become less popular.
Odd Lot Trades
Odd lot trades are trade orders made by investors that include less than 100 shares in the transaction or are not a multiple of 100. These trade orders generally encompass individual investors that the theory believes are less educated and influential in the market overall.
Round lots are the opposite of odd lots. They begin at 100 shares and are divisible by 100. These trade orders are seen to be more compelling as an indicator as they are typically made by professional traders or institutional investors.
Although technical analysts have the ability to follow the volume of odd-lot trades through technical analysis charting software programs, testing since the 1990s shows that these kinds of trades no longer seem to signify market turns. Given the information efficiencies of the information age, even individual investors may be just as likely to make an informed trade as an institutional trade. While the odd lot theory implies that these investors may be more important to follow for trade signals, this concept has become less important to analysts over time.
There are multiple reasons for this. The first reason is that individual investors began investing more heavily in mutual funds, which pool money into the hands of institutional investors. Secondly, fund managers and individuals alike began using exchange traded funds (ETFs), with large volume being normal for the most popular ETF offerings.
A third reason is the increased automation and computerization of market-making firms and the increased technology of high-frequency traders. Together, these factors have created an environment where order processing has become far more efficient. The greater efficiency of the markets has meant that odd lots are not processed any less effectively than round-lot orders.
Testing the Odd Lot Theory
Analysis of the odd lot theory, culminating in the 1990s, seems to disprove its general effectiveness. Whether because individual investors are not generally prone to making bad investment decisions, or because institutional traders no longer fear making trades in odd lots is not easily determined.
Overall, the theory is no longer as valid as many researchers and academics once opined. Author Burton Malkiel, credited for popularizing Random Walk Theory has stated that the individual investor, also known as the odd lotter, is generally not as uninformed or as incorrect as had been previously thought.
Related terms:
Bunching
Bunching is the combining of small or unusually-sized trade orders for the same security into one large order for simultaneous execution. read more
Inefficient Market
An inefficient market, according to economic theory, is one where prices do not reflect all information available. read more
January Effect
The January Effect is the tendency for stock prices to rise in the first month of the year following a year-end sell-off for tax purposes. read more
Mixed Lot
A mixed lot order is a blend of round lot, which are standardized trading amounts, and odd lot, which are non-standardized trading amounts, orders. read more
Odd Lot
An odd lot is an order amount for a security that is less than the normal unit of trading for that particular asset. read more
Odd Lotter
An odd lotter is an individual investor who buys securities, usually stocks, in odd lots, or in amounts that are not multiples of 100. read more
Random Walk Theory and Example
Random walk theory suggests that changes in stock prices have the same distribution and are independent of each other. read more
Round Lot
A round lot is a standard number of units of an investment product. A round lot of stocks is 100 shares or any number divisible by 100. read more