A limit order is an instruction to buy or sell a security at a specified price or better. For buy orders, the limit price represents the maximum price the trader will pay; for sell orders, it represents the minimum price they will accept. Limit orders provide price control but do not guarantee execution. They are fundamental tools for price-sensitive trading strategies and managing transaction costs.
Key Characteristics
Feature
Description
Impact
Price Control
Guaranteed
No worse than limit
Execution Speed
Variable
Queue position dependent
Fill Guarantee
None
May not execute
Fill Rate
Partial possible
Size dependent
Cost
Lower
Better price control
Order Book Mechanics
Position
Factor
Impact
Price Priority
Best prices first
Primary queue factor
Time Priority
First in, first out
Secondary factor
Size Priority
Varies by venue
May affect routing
Display Status
Lit vs. dark
Can affect priority
Use Cases
Strategy
Suitability
Reason
Entry Orders
Excellent
Price control
Scaling In
Good
Average price control
Taking Profit
Excellent
Price targeting
Cost Averaging
Good
Price discipline
Accumulation
Good
Price control over time
Price Considerations
Aspect
Buy Orders
Sell Orders
Limit Price
Maximum to pay
Minimum to accept
Placement
Below market
Above market
Fill Priority
Price ascending
Price descending
Execution
At or below limit
At or above limit
Implementation Strategy
Order Placement:
Price selection
Size determination
Time in force
Venue selection
Monitoring:
Market proximity
Fill progress
Queue position
Price movement
Management:
Adjust if needed
Cancel/replace
Track fills
Document execution
Risk Management
Risk Type
Description
Mitigation
Non-Execution
No fill
Price adjustment
Partial Fill
Incomplete execution
Size management
Opportunity Cost
Missing move
Price/time balance
Stale Orders
Market moves away
Regular review
Best Practices
Price Setting:
Market analysis
Spread consideration
Volume profile
Technical levels
Size Management:
Liquidity assessment
Fill probability
Impact analysis
Breaking up orders
Time Management:
Urgency evaluation
Market hours
Expiration setting
Regular review
Common Mistakes
Mistake
Impact
Prevention
Too Far from Market
No execution
Realistic pricing
Too Large Size
Partial fills
Size appropriately
Set and Forget
Missed opportunities
Active management
Wrong Time in Force
Order expiration
Proper duration
Market Conditions
Condition
Strategy Adjustment
Rationale
High Volatility
Wider limits
Increase fill probability
Low Liquidity
Patient pricing
Avoid impact
Trending Market
Price bias
Direction consideration
Range Bound
Level targeting
Support/resistance
Time in Force Options
Duration
Use Case
Advantage
Day
Standard trading
Daily reset
GTC
Longer-term targets
Persistence
GTD
Specific period
Time control
IOC
Immediate check
Quick execution
Venue Considerations
Venue Type
Characteristics
Best For
Lit Exchange
Transparent
Price discovery
Dark Pools
Hidden
Large orders
ECNs
Fast execution
Electronic trading
Market Makers
Guaranteed size
Block trades
Performance Metrics
Metric
Description
Target
Fill Rate
Execution percentage
Strategy dependent
Time to Fill
Duration to execution
Market dependent
Price Improvement
Better than limit
Any improvement
Implementation Shortfall
Total cost vs target
Minimize
Documentation Requirements
Element
Purpose
Timing
Limit Price
Execution control
Order entry
Fill Details
Execution tracking
Upon fill
Duration
Time control
Order entry
Modifications
Change tracking
As needed
Advanced Techniques
Scaling Strategies:
Multiple price levels
Size distribution
Time spacing
Price increments
Algorithmic Integration:
VWAP targeting
Iceberg orders
Pegged orders
Dynamic adjustment
Contingent Orders:
OCO (One-Cancels-Other)
If-Then conditions
Bracket orders
Trailing variations
Note: Limit order behavior and available features can vary by broker, exchange, and security type. Always verify specific capabilities with your trading venue.