Definition and Core Concept
This article defines the Stock Market as a collection of exchanges (e.g., NYSE, Nasdaq) where investors buy and sell shares of publicly traded companies. Trading mechanics include order types, market hours, clearing and settlement, and price discovery. Core order types: (1) market order (buy/sell at current best price, immediate executions), (2) limit order (specify price, executes only if reached), (3) stop order (triggers market order when price level hit), (4) stop-limit order (triggers limit order). The article addresses: objectives of understanding market mechanics; key concepts including bid-ask spread, volume, and liquidity; core mechanisms such as continuous trading, auctions (opening/closing), and order matching; international comparisons and debated issues (fractional shares, after-hours trading, payment for order flow); summary and emerging trends (commission-free trading, extended hours, retail investor access); and a Q&A section.
1. Specific Aims of This Article
This article describes stock market basics without endorsing specific brokers. Objectives commonly cited: executing trades efficiently, controlling executions price, managing risk, and understanding market structure.
2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations
Key terminology:
- Bid-ask spread: Difference between highest price buyer is willing to pay (bid) and lowest price seller is willing to accept (ask). Narrower spread = more liquid.
- Volume: Number of shares traded in a period. High volume indicates liquidity.
- Market order: Executes immediately at current market price. Guarantees executions, not price.
- Limit order: Executes only at specified price or better. Guarantees price, not executions.
Order types summary:
| Order type | Price guarantee | Executions guarantee | Use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market | No | Yes | Immediate entry/exit |
| Limit (buy below market) | Yes (max price) | No | Enter at discount |
| Limit (sell above market) | Yes (min price) | No | Take profit target |
| Stop (stop-loss) | No (market after trigger) | Yes (after trigger) | Limit downside |
| Stop-limit | Yes (after trigger) | No | Price-controlled stop |
3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration
Market hours (US exchanges):
- Regular trading: 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM Eastern, Mon-Fri.
- Pre-market: 4:00 AM – 9:30 AM (limited liquidity, higher volatility).
- After-hours: 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM (same characteristics).
Order matching (continuous trading):
- Limit orders placed on order book (bid and ask queues).
- Market orders match against best opposite-side limit orders.
- Price-time priority: higher bid priority; same price, earlier order executes first.
Auction mechanisms:
- Opening auction (9:30 AM) determines opening price balancing buy/sell orders.
- Closing auction (4:00 PM) determines official closing price (used for ETF NAV, index settlement).
Settlement (US stocks): T+1 (trade date plus one business day). Funds and shares settle next day.
4. International Comparisons and Debated Issues
Commission structures:
- Zero-commission trading (Robinhood, Schwab, Fidelity, E*Trade) since 2019-2020.
- Payment for order flow (PFOF) – brokers route orders to market makers for rebates. Controversial; banned in UK, Canada, Australia.
Fractional shares: Buy less than one share (e.g., $10 of Apple stock). Available at most brokers. Enables dollar-based investing.
Debated issues:
- Payment for order flow: Critics argue conflicts of interest (brokers may route to lower-quality venues). Proponents claim reduces commissions to zero.
- Extended-hours trading (pre-market, after-hours): Lower liquidity, wider spreads, risk of large price swings. Not recommended for inexperienced investors.
- High-frequency trading (HFT): Algorithmic traders using speed advantages. Regulated through market access rules, order-to-trade ratios.
5. Summary and Future Trajectories
Summary: Market orders execute immediately at current price; limit orders control price but may not fill. Bid-ask spread and volume indicate liquidity. Regular trading hours (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET). Zero-commission trading is now standard. Fractional shares enable small-dollar investing.
Emerging trends:
- 24/5 trading (some brokers offer overnight sessions).
- Cryptocurrency trading integration within stock brokerage apps.
- AI-powered order routing optimisation.
6. Question-and-Answer Session
Q1: What is a stop-loss order and how does it work?
A: A stop order (stop-loss) triggers a market order when a specified price is reached. Example: own stock at 50,setstopat50,setstopat45. If price falls to $45, market order executes. Does not guarantee exit price if price gaps down.
Q2: Can I trade after the market closes?
A: Yes, in extended-hours sessions (pre-market 4-9:30 AM ET, after-hours 4-8 PM ET). Liquidity is lower; spreads wider; not all orders types available. Limit orders recommended.
Q3: What is payment for order flow (PFOF)?
A: Broker receives payment from market maker for routing customer orders. Allows zero commissions. Critics say creates conflict; PFOF banned in UK, Canada, Australia. US continues to allow with disclosure.
https://www.sec.gov/investor/alerts/ib_orders.pdf
https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity
https://www.nyse.com/markets/nyse/trading-inf
