Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Limit Order ====== A Limit Order is an instruction you give your [[broker]] to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better. Think of it as telling a shopkeeper, "I'll buy that coat, but only if you sell it to me for $100 or less." This is the opposite of its impulsive cousin, the [[Market Order]], which simply says, "Buy it for me now, at whatever the current price is!" The beauty of the limit order lies in its precision. It gives you, the investor, control over the price you pay or receive, which is a fundamental discipline in [[value investing]]. Instead of chasing a stock's price, you set your own terms and let the price come to you. This simple tool is one of the most powerful ways to enforce patience and protect yourself from overpaying in the heat of the moment. ===== How Does a Limit Order Work? ===== A limit order sits on the [[stock exchange]]'s order book, waiting patiently for the market price to meet its condition. If the condition is never met, the order simply doesn't get filled (or 'executed'). This control comes in two distinct flavors, depending on whether you're buying or selling. ==== The Two Flavors: Buy and Sell ==== * **Buy Limit Order:** This order is placed //below// the current market price. It executes only if the stock's price drops to your specified limit price or lower. - //Example:// Shares of "Creative Corp." are currently trading at $52. After your analysis, you've determined its [[intrinsic value]] is much higher, but you only want to buy with a [[Margin of Safety]] at a price of $49.50. You place a **buy limit order** for 100 shares at $49.50. Your order will do nothing unless and until the market price of Creative Corp. falls to $49.50 or less. This ensures you buy at your target price or an even better one. * **Sell Limit Order:** This order is placed //above// the current market price. It executes only if the stock's price rises to your specified limit price or higher. - //Example:// You own shares of Creative Corp. and believe the price will eventually hit $75, a price you'd be happy to sell at. You can set a **sell limit order** at $75. If the stock price climbs and reaches or surpasses $75, your [[brokerage]] will automatically sell your shares for you. This helps you lock in profits without having to watch the market tick by tick. ===== Limit Orders vs. Market Orders: The Investor's Dilemma ===== Choosing between a limit and a market order boils down to a classic trade-off: do you want to control the **price** or guarantee the **execution**? ==== The Trade-Off: Price vs. Certainty ==== * **Limit Order:** Guarantees your **price**. You will never pay more than your limit for a buy or receive less than your limit for a sell. The primary risk is non-execution. If the stock's price zips past your limit and never comes back, you miss the trade entirely. You get price certainty at the cost of execution certainty. * **Market Order:** Guarantees your **execution** (assuming the stock has decent [[liquidity]]). Your order will be filled almost instantly. The primary risk is the price you get. In markets with high [[volatility]] or for stocks with a wide [[bid-ask spread]], the price you actually pay could be much worse than the price you saw on the screen a second ago. This painful difference is known as [[slippage]]. For disciplined investors, the choice is clear. The risk of missing a trade by a few cents is often preferable to the risk of abandoning your valuation discipline and overpaying. ===== A Value Investor's Best Friend ===== Value investing is not just about finding great businesses; it's about buying them at a rational price. The limit order is the perfect tool for implementing this philosophy. It acts as an unemotional barrier against market hysteria and FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out). When you determine that a company is worth $100 per share and you want to buy it at $80 to give yourself a margin of safety, a limit order at $80 makes your strategy real. It forces you to be patient. If the market doesn't offer you your price, you simply don't buy. As the legendary investor [[Warren Buffett]] advises, the stock market is a tool to serve you, not to instruct you. A limit order ensures you are the master, not the servant. ===== Practical Tips and Nuances ===== Before you start placing limit orders, it's wise to understand a couple of practical details that can affect your outcome. ==== Order Duration ==== Your limit order won't exist forever. You need to specify its lifespan. * **Day Order:** This is often the default setting. The order is only active for the current trading day. If it is not filled by the time the market closes, it is automatically canceled. * **Good 'til Canceled (GTC):** This order remains active for a much longer period (typically 60-90 days, check with your broker) or until you manually cancel it. GTC orders are ideal for the patient investor who has identified a great company and a fair price and is willing to wait for the market to cooperate. ==== The Risk of Partial Fills ==== Sometimes, your order might not be filled all at once. If you place a buy limit order for 200 shares at $50, and only 70 shares become available at that price during the day, your order will be "partially filled." You'll own 70 shares, and the remainder of your order (for 130 shares) will stay open, waiting to be filled until it either executes or expires. ==== When //Not// to Use a Limit Order ==== While a limit order is the value investor's default weapon, there are rare occasions a market order is acceptable. For extremely large, highly liquid companies with a tiny bid-ask spread (e.g., Apple or Microsoft), the risk of significant slippage on a market order is very low. However, even in these cases, using a limit order costs you nothing and reinforces good investment habits.