Open Position

Open Position

An open position in investing is any established or entered trade that has yet to close with an opposing trade. An open position can exist following a buy, a long position, a sell, or a short position. Day traders open and close their positions in a matter of seconds and aim to have no open positions at the end of the day. An open position represents market exposure for the investor, and the risk remains until the position is closed. The amount of risk entailed with an open position depends on the size of the position relative to the account size and the holding period.

An open position is a trade that has been established, but which has not yet been closed out with an opposing trade.

What Is an Open Position?

An open position in investing is any established or entered trade that has yet to close with an opposing trade. An open position can exist following a buy, a long position, a sell, or a short position. In any case, the position remains open until an opposing trade takes place.

An open position is a trade that has been established, but which has not yet been closed out with an opposing trade.
If an investor owns 300 shares of a stock, they have an open position in that stock until it is sold.
An open position represents market exposure for the investor, and the risk remains until the position is closed.
Day traders open and close their positions in a matter of seconds and aim to have no open positions at the end of the day.

Open Position Explained

For example, an investor who owns 500 shares of a certain stock is said to have an open position in that stock. When the investor sells those 500 shares, the position closes. Buy-and-hold investors typically have one or more open positions at any given time. Short-term traders may execute "round-trip" trades; a position opens and closes within a relatively short period. Day traders and scalpers may even open and close a position within a few seconds, trying to catch minimal but multiple price movements throughout the day.

Open Positions and Risk

An open position represents market exposure for the investor. The risk exists until the position closes. Open positions can be held from minutes to years depending on the style and objective of the investor or trader.

Of course, portfolios are composed of many open positions. The amount of risk entailed with an open position depends on the size of the position relative to the account size and the holding period. Generally speaking, long holding periods are riskier because there is more exposure to unexpected market events.

The only way to eliminate exposure is to close out the open positions. Notably, closing a short position requires buying back the shares while closing long positions entails selling the long position.

Open Position Diversification

The recommendation for investors is to limit risk by only holding open positions that equate to 2% or less of their total portfolio value. By spreading out the open positions throughout various market sectors and asset classes, an investor can also reduce risk through diversification. For example, holding a 2% portfolio position in stocks spread out through multiple sectors — such as financials, information technology, health care, utilities, and consumer staples along with fixed-income assets such as government bonds — represents a diversified portfolio.

Investors adjust the allocation per sector according to market conditions, but keeping the positions to just 2% per stock can even out the risk. Using stop-losses to close out positions is also recommended to curtail losses and eliminate exposure of underperforming companies. Investors are always susceptible to systemic risk when holding open positions overnight.

Open Position and Day Trading

Day traders buy and sell securities within one trading day. The practice is common in the forex and stock markets. However, day trading is risky and not for the novice trader. A day trader attempts to close all their open positions before the end of the day. If they don't, they hold on to their risky position overnight or longer during which time the market could turn against them.

Day traders are typically disciplined experts; they have a plan and stick to it. Moreover, day traders often have plenty of money to gamble on day trading. The smaller the price movements, the more money is required to capitalize on those movements.

Related terms:

Close Position

Closing a position refers to a security transaction that is the opposite of an open position, thereby nullifying it and eliminating the initial exposure. 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

Long Position

A long position conveys bullish intent as an investor will purchase the security with the hope that it will increase in value. read more

Opening Transaction

Opening transaction, a term typically associated with derivative products, refers to the initial buying or selling that creates an active position. read more

Overnight Limit

The overnight limit is the maximum net position in one or more currencies that a trader is allowed to carry over from one trading day to the next. read more

Overnight Position

Overnight positions refer to open trades that have not been liquidated by the end of the normal trading day and are quite common in currency markets. read more

Position

A position is the amount of a security, commodity, or currency that is owned, or sold short, by an individual, dealer, institution, or other entity.  read more

Round-Trip Trading

Round-trip trading seeks to inflate transaction volumes through the continuous and frequent purchase and sale of a particular security or commodity. read more

Scalper

Scalpers enter and exit trades quickly, usually within seconds, placing large trades in the hopes of profiting from small price changes. read more

Short (Short Position)

Short, or shorting, refers to selling a security first and buying it back later, with the anticipation that the price will drop and a profit can be made. read more