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Mixed Lot

Categories: Trading

Think of those math story problems from sixth grade that went something like this:

A bag of hot dogs contains 8 wieners. You need 20 hot dogs for a barbecue. How many bags do you need?

The trick of the problem comes from the fact that you need a partial bag to get the 20 dogs. The real answer is 2.5 bags, but you need to purchase three bags to get all the dogs you need.

In other words: it’s a mixed lot. You need two full lots (the full bags) and a partial one. A mixture of full and parts.

It comes up on Wall Street in stock trading. Stocks usually get sold in 100-count lots. So purchasing 200 shares would consist of two 100-share lots.

A mixed lot includes any non-100 divisible number. So a transaction of 530 shares would entail five 100-share lots and a partial lot of 30 shares.

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