Types of orders for beginners
My previous post discussed and clarified what short and long positions are. What leverage and margin is, and finally what liquidation means. This topic will continue on that area by identifying the common types of orders a trader or investor can place. Hopefully this post will help newer investors understand some of the types of orders available and should be a relatively short post.
If anyone is interested in previous past posts please see:
- Fundamental Research on projects: here
- What is a cryptocurrency wallet: here
- Staking: the concepts of PoS: here
- What is the blockchain: here
- Trading strategies: here
- Fundamental analysis: here
- Sentiment analysis: here
- Mobile device security education for crypto: here
- The smart money market cycle: here
- Lump sum vs Cost averaging: here
- Arbitrage Explained: here
- Dusting attacks explained: here
- Liquidity Pools Explained: here
- ETH London Hardfork Explained: here
- Defi hacks and exploits explained: here
- Smart contracts explained: here
- BTC Halving Explained: here
- Analysis on the $600 million theft: here
- Inflation vs deflation: here
- Cryptographic hashing for the blockchain. What is it?: here
- Longs vs Shorts, leverage, margin and liquidations explained for beginners: here
MARKET ORDERS
Market order is intended for traders who wish to have their orders executed immediately. The order will be filled immediately at the best price available from the order book. A large market order may have market impact and increase trade cost.
If you’re unsure what an order book is then it’s essentially an electronic list of buy and sell orders for an asset and is organised by the price level.
LIMIT ORDERS
Limit order is used to specify the highest bid price / the lowest ask price a trader is willing to accept. Traders use this order type to minimise trading costs, it’s also important to know the order may not be executed if the order price is deep out of the market.
If you’re unsure what bid and ask are then basically The bid price is the maximum price that a buyer is willing to pay for an asset and the ask price is the minimum price that a seller is willing to take for that same asset
CONDITIONAL ORDER
Conditional order is a limit order or a market order taking effect when a specific condition is met.
TAKE PROFIT AND STOP LOSS ORDERS
Take profit and stop loss orders are an exit strategy that traders place ahead on positions to ensure timely and automatic exit. Stop loss order is used as a risk management tool to limit the loss of a position.
Examples can be:
- Take Profit Market Order: Once price reaches take-profit price, a market order is placed immediately
- Stop Loss Market Order: Once the price reaches the stop-loss price, a market order is placed immediately
- Trailing Stop Loss Order: Once the trailing distance is set, when price reverts to reach the trailing distance, a market order is placed immediately.
SLIPPAGE
It’s important to touch on slippage whilst on the topic of orders. Slippage tends to occur when the market is highly volatile and market orders are used. It is essentially the difference between the expected price of a order and the price at which the order is executed. Limit orders can help prevent slippage but there is a risk of the order not being executed and can occur if the market fluctuates quickly due to small window of time for the order to be executed.
As always any topics you want covered just let me know. The following are topics I have on my list:
- ETH gas explained for beginners
- BTC market cycle theories explained for beginners
- Seed phrases: BIP39 explained for beginners
- Lending and borrowing in defi explained for beginners
- Yield farming explained for beginners
- Why time in the market beats timing the market: an analysis for beginners
- The technicals behind NFTs explained for beginners
- APR vs APY
- UDP and TCP
Edit: forgot to include but if you guys want me to do an AMA at some point in the future, just comment down below and let me know 🙂
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