Selling Stocks Limit

by admin on October 10, 2010

selling stocks limit


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With over 30 million copies sold since its original publication in 1960, Psycho-Cybernetics has been used by athletes, entrepreneurs, college students, and many others, to achieve life-changing goals–from losing weight to dramatically increasing their income–finding that success is not only possible but remarkably simple. Now updated to include present-day anecdotes and current personalities, T…

selling stocks limit

When you are looking to purchase shares of stock, there are a few ways to do that. Whether you are talking to your broker, or doing the trading on-line these same terms apply.

The first term is buying at Market. This means you are willing to pay the current price of the stock, as determined by current demand. If you really want to purchase shares at any price and right now, this is the way to do it. You are relinquishing control to the market. You broker, or program will snatch up the shares you desire at the current market price. For example, you want to buy 200 shares of XYZ at market price. When you were initially looking at the company, doing your Due Diligence, the price was at 5 dollars. That seemed like a good entry point, so the next day you put in your Market order. Unknown to you, a few other people saw the same stock and also placed orders. The price was driven up to 7.50, so that is where you purchased your shares. Total cost, $7.50 X 200 shares plus transaction fee of $10 = $1510. If you really wanted the stock, and $7.50 also fit into your model of a good price, you are the proud owner of 200 shares. If you didn’t want to spend $7.50, too bad, you still own the shares. How could you have avoided this?

The next term is called a Limit order. This works similar to the market order, in that you are still saying you want the 200 shares, but you are calling the price. If you put in the order and said 200 shares Limit $5 per share, then $5 is the maximum price you will pay. You are limiting the price. If the price has risen, you will not get the shares. You can also make this have a defined term by saying the order is good until you cancel it, or until the end of the day. You can define the time line you are willing to enact that trade. With the limit order, your cost will be $5 X 200 shares plus transaction fee of $10 = $1010. However, the trade may never take place if the stock doesn’t see the $5 price again. On the other side, if the price is below $5 when you place the order, you will get the lower price and the total cost will be lower. Limit doesn’t say, “I will pay $5.” It sets the maximum you are willing to pay.

The flip side of this is, of course, selling stocks. You must first realize that there are two categories of sells. The first is short term and the second is long term. This is strictly a factor of the time you hold a stock. The dividing line is 365 days. The difference between the two is the tax rate of your gain. If you keep a stock less than a year, the gain (assuming you have a gain) gets taxed at your current bracket. If you hold a stock for more than a year it gets taxed at around 15%. This was put in place to add stability to the market. If people didn’t have this tax rate in the back of their mind, the market would be a lot more unstable. For more on short and long term gains check out This

Another thing you need to keep in mind is the fees that are involved with your buying and selling. If you are a small time investor, especially, this can whack you pretty good. For this discussion, I’m going to take taxes out of the equation. If you buy stock A for $10 a share, and get 10 shares; your total cost is $100. (I realize this is a low number, but it is for illustration purposes only.) Now you add the trade price; on E-trade that is $12.99. So instead of $10 per share, you have paid $11.29 per share.

Cost Breakdown

$100/10 shares = $10 per share

($100 + 12.99)/10 shares = $11.29 Per share

So here you are a year later deciding to sell this stock, and the price is $12.50 per share. That is a 25% gain. Nice trade, smart move. Or is it?

When you sell the stock, you get hit with the same trade cost of $12.99. So we actually paid $11.29 per share, so the gain is not $2.50 but only $1.21 per share. When you add in the cost of the sale, it is even lower. Check out the table.

Buy price

($100 + 12.99)/10 shares = $11.29 Per share

Sell Price

($125 – 12.99/10 Shares = $11.20 per share

Gain/Loss

$112 – $112.90 = – $.90

So after a year you have $99.10 instead of $100. This is obviously an exaggerated case. But even if you would add another 90 shares and say you bought 100 shares, the impact dollar wise is still the same. You r profits are minimized by the cost of the trades. The only difference is in the percentages. In the “buy” portion, the added trade cost makes the price per share $10.13 ($1012.99/100 = 10.129) and likewise on the sell. The sale price is $12.37 per share. The profit in the 100 share scenario is $224.01.

This is a pretty simple concept, but one that people can overlook when they are trying to make “quick cash.” Last year I paid $467 in trade fees. If I had a small portfolio, that could be a huge percentage, and could wipe out any profits I might have made.

If you really are interested in controlling your own investments and using a stock evaluation tool that can help separate the winners from the dogs check out Selecting Value Stocks [http://selectingvaluestocks.com] my step by step guide.

If you have any questions on any of the articles that I post please contact me and I will be happy to answer them to the best of my ability Robert Britt

selling stocks limit Questions


I Want to start buying/selling stocks! How/Where do u buy and sell them Is There an age limit please help!?

If you’re a rookie in investing or stocks, go to

www.finance.yahoo.com.

Open up a portfolio without using real money. You can give yourself as much or as little money to try out the market. The stocks you want to focus on is consumer staples, consumer discretionary, and healthcare. These are DEFENSIVE stocks that will survive through good and bad times. Most of my positions are in these stocks. Some names include 3M, Procter & Gamble, Kimberly Clark, Exxon Mobil, Walmart, Costco. Everybody’s got to eat and wipe their butts regardless of the state of economy. Many of these companies survived through the Great Depression.

That’s the benefits. You can sleep at night knowing your money is doing well. There are NO guarantees that you won’t lose money. It’s just that these stocks are the best. They pay good dividends too.

Then once you’re comfortable and test the waters of the market, you can finally put some real money in. Go to Scottrade.com. They’re excellent for beginners.

If you’re new to stocks, DON’T DAY TRADE. You’ll a rookie in a world of professionals. I tried day-trading with Citigroup and AIG when they were a little bit over $1. I had some luck at first, making about $30 a day but I was way over my head. My luck didn’t last long and I had to rethink my strategy.

Day trading involves A LOT of commissions to the broker. With all the commissions deducted from each trade, you’ll be lucky if you only lose half your money.

I would just day trade using Yahoo! Finance. Open a stimulation account, give yourself $100 worth of fake money and play it in the stimulation format. You’ll see what I mean by losing money every easily.

Good luck.

When you buy stocks at market price, and let’s say it’s at 10 cents, does this mean that you could possibly…?

When you buy stocks at market price, and let’s say it’s at 10 cents, does this mean that you could possibly be buying it at more than that?

If someone is selling a stock that is 10 cents per share right now for 20 cents per share, would it be bought if you did not put a limit on the buy?

Yep, “at market” orders do not set the price you buy it at, just sets the trigger for a trade. If the price is at, your example, 10 cents and you order to buy a thousand, then the “buy” signal is flashed and a thousand shares is bought whether the price has meanwhile slid to 5 cents or flew to 5 dollars.

If you want to buy at a dime, then place a limit order. It will be executed only at a dime, not nine cents, not 11.

selling stocks limit Videos

#05: Buying and Selling

Penny Stock Quotes | Penny Stock Investing | Stock Market Basics

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New Psycho-Cybernetics


New Psycho-Cybernetics


$10.28


With over 30 million copies sold since its original publication in 1960, Psycho-Cybernetics has been used by athletes, entrepreneurs, college students, and many others, to achieve life-changing goals–from losing weight to dramatically increasing their income–finding that success is not only possible but remarkably simple. Now updated to include present-day anecdotes and current personalities, T…

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