At-the-Opening Order

  

Categories: Investing, Stocks, Trading

What are At-the-Close Order and At-the-Opening Orders? Simply put, they’re a way of buying and selling stocks and bonds. They’re really a hybrid form of limit order...only instead of limiting the order of 100 shares of Mickey D’s at $45 or better, the ""limit"" is time based. That is, it is placed a minute or less from the close of the market...like 3:59 pm New York time, or the open of the market at 9:31 am New York time.

So...why would someone do this kind of limit order? Well, if a company the day before had printed what looked like a really good quarter, but upon deep inspection the investor who owned the shares thought otherwise, then they would want to take advantage of a high opening print, and just sell at whatever the price was a couple minutes after the open, making the bet that the stock would trade down after bigger, smarter, better analysis was published on the stock itself.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Takedown?7 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is a takedown well it's basically a commission or a [The definition of takedown]

00:07

spread that investment bankers um take down from the proceeds raised on a

00:13

securities offering ie an IPO well specifically that takers

00:17

down are called the syndicate and we wish we could tell you that with [People playing cards and smoking]

00:21

something mob-related but that's just a group of stock brokers who generally

00:25

sell to institutional accounts like mutual funds hedge funds and a big fat

00:29

family set of offices yeah like wealthy people's offices yeah at its essence the [Pile of cash]

00:33

take down is the gross profit that each syndicate member makes after the

00:38

placement of the securities after wire fees and other basic transactional costs

00:43

are covered such as the sellers of the securities get their dough whatever [The words 'illustrative example time' fall out of a piggy bank]

00:50

dot-com is selling 10 million shares of 20 bucks a pop the syndicate buys them

00:54

for 19 bucks each five minutes before placing them or selling them to the buy [Definition of the buy side]

00:59

side so there's a $1 spread in this placement and in most cases the lead

01:04

underwriter gets some percentage of the gross spread off the top to cover the [Calculation of the underwriter commission]

01:08

zillion dollars they spent on expensive lawyers and other bureaucrats being

01:13

certain that the securities offering complied with the you know 742 laws all ['The Big Book of 742 Laws' appears]

01:18

deriven from the 1933 and then 34 acts so if the lead banker gets a say a 15

01:23

percent override well then 85 cents net is left over for the takedown to be

01:29

distributed among the selling members of the syndicate and if any of those [Money being moved to the syndicate]

01:33

selling members feels they've been cheated well get ready to see one of [People stand up angrily in a board room]

01:37

these take down in this corner accountant wearing glasses 132 pounds so [Two men wearing boxing gloves ready to fight]

01:43

yeah pale-skinned alright sorry pal pick the right career [Guy is punched and knocked down]

Up Next

Finance: What is Good Delivery?
11 Views

What is Good Delivery? Good delivery just means that nothing gets in the way of a security transfer after a transaction is made. It’s kind of a d...

Finance: What are At-the-Close Order and At-the-Opening Order?
24 Views

What are At-the-Close Orders and At-the-Opening Orders? At-the-Close orders are given to brokers and the brokers can only fill them at the close of...

Finance: What is a Delayed Opening?
0 Views

What is a Delayed Opening? When a publicly traded company makes an announcement or if a news item concerning the company comes out after market clo...

Finance: What is "when-issued"?
4 Views

When-issued is a trading condition that applies to structural changes in companies that result in a new entity with its own set of trading rules.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)