Trade Execution
What is Trade Execution?
Trade execution is the process that turns your order (buy/sell instruction) into a filled trade at a specific price and size. In short, what is trade execution? It’s everything that happens from the moment you click Buy/Sell until you get a confirmation with the fill price.
How Trade Execution Works
- You place an order (market, limit, stop, or stop-limit).
- The platform routes it to the broker/liquidity provider.
- It fills (fully or partially) at the best available price based on your order type and current market liquidity.
- You receive a fill report: price, size, time, and any costs (spread/commission/financing).
Order Types and Execution Behavior
- Market order: Aims to fill immediately at the next available price. Highest fill certainty; price may differ from what you saw (slippage possible).
- Limit order: Fills only at your price or better; may not fill if the market doesn’t trade at that price.
- Stop (stop-market): Becomes a market order when the stop price is touched; likely to fill, but price can slip in fast moves.
- Stop-limit: When triggered, it becomes a limit order; gives price control, but execution isn’t guaranteed.
Example of Trade Execution
You click Buy EURUSD at 1.10201:
- With a market order, if liquidity is thin, you might be filled at 1.10204 (small negative slippage) or 1.10199 (positive slippage).
- With a limit order at 1.10201, the trade fills only if the market can match 1.10201 or better; otherwise, it waits.
This shows how trade execution affects your actual fill price.
- Spread & liquidity: Tighter spreads and deeper liquidity usually mean cleaner fills.
- Volatility & news timing: Fast markets can cause slippage or partial fills.
- Order size: Larger orders may need multiple price levels to fill.
- Connection & platform speed: Slower connections can lead to late quotes and worse fills.
Tips for Better Execution
- Use limit orders when price control matters.
- Avoid placing new orders right on top of high-impact news, if you want to reduce slippage.
- Trade during more liquid hours for your instrument.
- Always review your fill reports to understand actual costs and outcomes.
Other Glossary Terms
T
- Take Profit
A take profit (TP) is an automated order that closes a trade once the market hits your target price, helping you secure gains without constantly monitoring the charts.
- Technical Analysis
Technical analysis is a rules-based study of price charts, patterns, and indicators used to plan precise entries, exits, and risk levels by analyzing past price behavior to guide future trades.
- Tick
A tick is the smallest possible price movement on a trading platform, representing the minimum step a price can move, helping traders set precise entries, stops, and targets.
- Trailing Stop
A trailing stop is a dynamic stop order that automatically adjusts as price moves in your favor, locking in gains and protecting profits if the market reverses.
- Trailing Drawdown
An EOD trailing drawdown is a loss limit that trails your account’s highest end-of-day balance, moving up after daily closes but never down, and breaching if balance touches it.
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