Limit should be set to higher than market price.
yamaha wrote: In reply to GameboyRMH: In theory, but I just got hosed on that and it automatically sold it for the limit I placed on it while the market price was 40 cents higher.....
That's what it is supposed to do.
You set the limit.
There is a 20 minute delay on the game.
So what's going? Why the highs on Friday and then such crap this week?
I've got YPF and GEOS, both are really below their averages. GEOS looks like it might be in the tank for awhile (consistently falling).
Thursday/friday was higher the week before we started as well. I'm guessing this is all fairly normal.
So can someone please clarify the difference between "Stop" and "Limit"? Which one works for shorts?
I don't know what happened between yesterday and today, but I got gut-punched when I logged in. EVERYTHING bar two stocks is down. One of the two that is up? Sears, the one I'm shorting. It's up 4% WTFBBQ, articles just came out how they were going to eat it, then their stock jumps. And how the hell does GM's stock drop just because Morgan Stanley proclaims they think that the unannounced quarterlies might not be as good as everyone expects?
Seems like lots of money is there to be made just by getting famous and throwing out opinions to manipulate the prices.
I want to get out of something but the site isn't giving me an option to sell. WTF? I can only buy more or sell short.
The "SELL" button isn't even there.
JamesMcD wrote: I want to get out of something but the site isn't giving me an option to sell. WTF? I can only buy more or sell short.
Did you click "TRADE" next to the stock listed in your portfolio? (Not in Trading view).
Let me try...
"Stop" restricts top end, on both purchases and short sales. A stop is a sell order, so on sales it stops growth, and on shorts it stops losses.
"Limit" is the opposite- it restricts bottom end. So, on a sale, it limits your losses, and on a short it restricts your gains.
Did I get that right? (Terribly worded, I know)
A "Stop" is when you enter a price, and the order (sell or buy) is filled at market price when your entered price is hit. In other words, the price you enter is a trigger for a buy or sale to happen, but you might not buy or sell at the price you want because the order is filled at market price after your trigger price is hit.
A "Limit" order is when you enter a price to either buy or sell, and the limit option prevents the order from being filled at a greater price (buy) or a lesser price (sell) than the price you enter.
I'm almost ready to kick off another concrete shoe, it would cost me a bit over a Challenge budget at the moment. Or perhaps in more fitting terms, about half an axle set of supercar brake pads
Edit: Did it, phew! Gonna put that money into more of the steady earners.
In reply to SVreX:
Huh.....the 20min delay seems to be great knowledge to possess. The odd thing though, the stock never reached the "limit" I had set.....the stock vanished, it gave me back money/awful loss, and doesn't appear on any tab in the portfolio part.
The site was all kinds of broken today. I bought a bunch of stock that didn't go through, so i did it again about a half hour later. Didn't go through.
Did it one more time, and all of a sudden i was rewarded with all three purchases.
I'm sitting on berkeleying 315k shares of Aeropostale. Seriously. 315k berkeleying shares.
Hmm... Totals show only 2 people in positive territory today, and they both have my last name!
But I don't think it is that simple...
Swankie started today $23k in the hole, and ended positive $11k (passing through positive $80k), but shows a net loss today of negative 6.56%.
How does that work??
I didn't actually start today $23k in the hole.
The timing/delay of everything really screws with things if you let it.
A couple of minute upticks in a few of mine on the day, but overall, EVERYTHING is in the red (had about 4 or 5 green yesterday)... except Sears! Finally. Well, that sounds harsh since I kind of like Sears, but their stock dropping is helping my short plans.
And just to make sure I have this straight: the only difference between "stop" and "limit" is that stop does it at market price whenever the trigger is hit (i.e. market price could shift in the lag from trigger to sale) whereas limit only lets the transaction go through as long as the price trigger remains tripped?
Example, a stock is at $55 and I set a limit of $58, as long as stock stays above $58 for the time the transaction takes, it will sell, right? For a short, if stock is at $25 and I set limit of $23, it will cover as long as the price stays below $23?
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