Types of Stock Trades

In this beginner’s stock trading step-by-step tutorial, part of our guide to trading stocks online, you will learn about the different kinds of trading orders you can place with your online broker.

The 13 Primary Types of Stock Order

After you've chosen a stockbroker, you are going to want to begin trading shares. Before you do that, you should learn the 13 types of trade orders you can place online and the circumstances under which you would use them.

You may not use all of these types of order, but you never know. It's good to be aware of the full range of choices you have at your disposal.

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Market

Shaking hands and a wall of stock numbers
A market order is the simplest type of stock trade you can place with your broker. It means that if you want to buy or sell 100 shares of a stock, for instance, it will get transmitted to the exchange and the order will be filled at the current price. Paul Taylor/Getty Images

The simplest and most common type of stock trade is carried out with a market order. Market orders indicate that you are willing to take whatever price is presented to you when your order is executed.

Imagine you want to buy 100 shares of Apple. If the stock is trading at $181 when you place your market order, you shouldn't be surprised if the price you pay is a bit more or less than that, maybe $181.50 or $180.60.

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Limit

stock market
Kidsada Manchinda / Getty Images

A limit order allows you to limit either the maximum price you will pay or the minimum price you are willing to accept when buying or selling a stock, respectively. The primary difference between a market order and a limit order is that the latter order may not be executed.

Imagine you want to buy shares of U.S. Bancorp. You believe the stock is overvalued at its current price of $53.48 and you don't want to pay more than $51, so you place a limit order set to execute at $51 or less. If the stock falls to that price, your order should be executed.

There are three considerations you should take into account before placing a limit order:

  • The stock price may never fall (or rise) to the limit you’ve established. As a result, your order may never be executed.
  • Limit orders are executed in the order in which they are received. It is possible that the stock you are interested in buying (or selling) will reach your limit price yet your trade will not be filled because the price fluctuated above (or below) your limit before the trade could be carried out. This problem is far less common now with online trading than it was when people used to call their broker to place trading orders.
  • If there is a sudden drop in the stock price, your order will be executed at your limit price. Imagine the bank's CEO resigns unexpectedly or some other type of bad news is reported, and U.S. Bancorp's stock drops to $45. As the stock was falling in price, your order was executed. You are now sitting on a loss of $6 a share.
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All-or-None (AON)

Financial Newspapers with Stock Quotations
Gregor Schuster / Getty Images

When you purchase a substantial amount of a company’s stock, it may take a while for the order to be completed, and so you might end up paying different prices for different parts of the order. If you want to avoid that situation, you can place an all-or-none (AON) order, which requires the stock to be purchased in a single transaction or not at all. However, that also means your order may not be executed at all if there are not enough shares available to fulfill it. Unlike the next two similar types of trading orders, an AON order is in effect until you cancel it or it is executed.

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Fill-or-Kill (FOK)

A fill-or-kill (FOK) order must be filled immediately in its entirety or it is killed (canceled). That means FOK orders may never be partially executed.

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Immediate-or-Cancel (IOC)

The key difference between this kind of trade order and the FOK is that this order allows partial amounts of the order to be completed. When shares are no longer available at the limit or a better price, buying or selling ends immediately and the order is canceled.

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Stop

Dow Jones Industrial stock index futures pit.
Tim Boyle / Getty Images

In common parlance, stop and stop limit orders are known as “stop loss” orders because day traders and other investors use them to lock in profits from profitable trades. Let's look at the stop order first.

A stop order automatically converts into a market order when a predetermined price—the stop price—is reached. At that point, the ordinary rules of market orders apply: the order is guaranteed to be executed, but you won’t know the price.

07 of 13

Stop Limit

In contrast, a stop limit order automatically converts into a limit order when the stop price is reached. As with other limit orders, your stop limit order may or may not be executed depending upon the price movement of the security.

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Short Sell Order

Haralson Mining Company Stock Certificate
Bettmann Archive / Getty Images

Selling short or shorting a stock is a practice that can enable you to profit if you correctly predict that the price of a stock you don't own will fall. Let's say, for example, you think General Electric stock is overvalued at a price of $12.50. To try to take advantage of this situation, you can sell borrowed shares of the stock at the price you believe to be inflated.

You enter a short sell order for 1,000 shares, borrowing the $12,500 worth of shares (1,000 shares x $12.50 each), selling them on the open market, and collecting the cash.

If the stock price does indeed fall, you can use the next type of order to complete your short sale and make a profit.

09 of 13

Buy to Cover

Let's say GE stock did as you predicted and fell to $10.50 per share. You would place what's known as a buy to cover order to complete the short sale.

Your buy to cover order would repurchase the 1,000 shares for $10,500 and return the borrowed shares to your online broker. Because you bought the shares for $2,000 less than you sold them for, you will have made a $2,000 gain.

Here are a few important rules regarding short selling:

  • In order to sell short, you must have margin privileges in your brokerage account. That means you can trade with more money than you have in your account if you wish.
  • You must maintain enough purchasing power in your account to carry out a buy to cover order on your short sale. If the price of your shorted stock increases and you don't have enough money in your account to buy the shares back at the higher price, you will face a margin call—a demand by your broker to put more cash or securities in your account to be able to cover the trade.
10 of 13

Day Order

Dow Plunges Over 800 Points In Intraday Trading As Investors Dump Tech Stocks
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The next two types of orders are characterized by when the trades may take place: day and good-til-canceled. Let's first consider day orders.

Day orders are in fact just what their name implies: they are good only until the end of the regular trading day—4:00 p.m. Eastern time—at which point they are canceled. All market orders are placed as day orders.

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Good-Til-Canceled (GTC)

A good-til-canceled (GTC—also spelled with till or 'til or cancelled) order remains open until one of three things occurs:

  1. It is completely filled.
  2. You cancel the order.
  3. A certain time period that's determined by your online broker has passed.

There are risks in using these orders:

  • You may forget you placed the order.
  • If you place a large trade with GTC status, you may pay a commission each day your order is partially filled. If, on the other hand, your order is filled by multiple transactions in a single day, your broker should charge you only a single commission.
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Trailing Stop

Electronic screen of stock data numbers
Muhla1 / Getty Images

One way to protect gains and limit losses automatically is by placing a trailing stop order. With this kind of order, you set a stop price as either a spread in points or a percentage of current market value.

Imagine you purchased 500 shares of Coca-Cola at $50 per share. The current price is $58. You want to lock in at least $5 of the per share profit you’ve made but wish to continue holding the stock, hoping to benefit from any further increases. To meet your objective, you could place a trailing stop order with a stop value of $3 per share.

If the stock price does what you had hoped it would do, your order will sit on your broker’s books and automatically adjust upwards as the price of Coca-Cola’s common stock increases. At the time your trailing stop order is placed, your broker knows to sell your shares if the stock price falls below $55 ($58 current market price - $3 trailing stop loss = $55 sale price).

Imagine Coca-Cola increases steadily to $62 per share. Now, your trailing stop order has automatically kept pace and will convert to a market order at $59 ($62 current market price - $3 trailing stop loss = $59 sale price). That would provide a gain of $9 per share.

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Bracketed Orders

Businesswoman and businessman talking profit on futuristic display
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Bracketed orders go one step further than trailing stop orders. Just like the latter type of order, with a bracketed order, you set a trailing stop as either a percentage or fixed amount below the stock price. However, you can also establish an upper limit that, when reached, will result in the stock being sold.

Going back to our Coca-Cola example, let’s now assume you placed a bracketed order with a trailing stop level of $3 per share and an upper limit of $65 per share. The bracketed order will behave the same as the trailing stop order, with the $3 trailing stop automatically ratcheting up as the price increases. The only difference is that if and when Coca-Cola hits $65, the bracketed order will automatically convert into a market order and will be immediately executed.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

How long does it take for a stock trade to settle?

By law, most securities trades must settle within two business days of the trade date. This rule has been in place since 2017. Before that, trades had to settle within three days.

How many stock trades can you make in a day?

You can make as many trades as you like in a day, but if you close the position in the same day (a "day trade"), then you may become defined as a "pattern day trader." Pattern day traders are those who make four or more day trades within five business days. They have access to more margin, but they are also required to maintain at least $25,000 of equity in their account.

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Sources
The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Updated Investor Bulletin: New 'T+2' Settlement Cycle—What Investors Need To Know."

  2. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Margin Rules for Day Trading."

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