Following question regarding market order - how exactly I can fill an
order and assign an exit condition - for example if stock price go
under X sell the stock automatically.
1. Can I set such condition in JBookTrader (and how...)
2. Do I need to do it by myself every second (means that I will verify
stock price in my indicator class and will open the counter position
that will close the already opened one?)



On Nov 11, 5:26 am, skunktrader <[email protected]> wrote:
> LMT != STP
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> Astor wrote:
> > Limit orders do not necessarily protect you from excessive volatility. Your
> > limit order becomes market order when the limit is touched but there is no
> > guarantee that that the execution will be at the limit price. If price 
> > gaps, the
> > execution can be quite far from the limit.
>
> > ________________________________
> > From: ShaggsTheStud <[email protected]>
> > To: [email protected]
> > Sent: Wed, November 10, 2010 1:18:17 PM
> > Subject: Re: [JBookTrader] market order vs limit order
>
> > I think it would be good practice to limit 5 ticks away (some number that is
> > both big enough, and small enough), and if that fails, halt trading.  I'm 
> > not
> > sure if it is worth the effort, though.  It might also be good to halt if 
> > the
> > spread gets too wide.
>
> > On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 3:37 AM, Eugene Kononov <[email protected]> 
> > wrote:
>
> > >On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 2:21 AM, Jian <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > >hey jbooktrader
> > >>    I saw all orders created by jbooktrader are market orders, not limit 
> > >>orders.
> > >>Is there any risk of doing this? for example, after some special events, 
> > >>like
> > >>fed meeting note announcement, the price is change very rapidly, is the
> > >>following situation possible:  jbooktrader decides to buy or short at a 
> > >>price,
> > >>then place a market order, then filled with a price that's far away from 
> > >>the
> > >>expected price?
>
> > >In my live trading, IB executions were from 150ms to 600ms. The slippage is
> > >virtually 0, that is, the fill price is nearly always the same as the 
> > >expected
> > >price. I do acknowledge that under some extreme market conditions, the 
> > >slippage
> > >may widen, but I think the probability of that is quite low. The limit 
> > >orders
> > >are not without the risks, either: think about chasing the market with a 
> > >limit
> > >order endlessly, thus incurring a bigger loss compared to the one taken 
> > >with a
> > >market order with some slippage.
>
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