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stop order

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal 0.03 sec.
Stop Order
An order to buy or sell a security when its price reaches a particular point, thus ensuring a particular entry price, or limiting the investor's loss, or locking in his or her profit. Also referred to as a "stop-loss order".

Notes:
Investors commonly use a stop order before leaving for holidays or entering a situation where they are unable to monitor their portfolio for an extended period of time. Traders that use technical analysis will place stop orders below major moving averages, trendlines, swing highs, swing lows or other key support or resistance levels.


Stop order (or stop)
An order to buy or sell at the market when a definite price is reached, either above (on a buy) or below (on a sell) the price that prevailed when the order was given.

stop order
1. An order to buy or to sell a security when the security's price reaches or passes a specified level. At that time the stop order becomes a market order and the executing broker, usually the specialist, obtains the best possible price. A stop order to buy must be at a price above the current market price and a stop order to sell must have a specified price below the current market price. See also buy stop order, electing sale, protective stop, sell stop order, stop-limit order, stop price, trailing stop.
2. An order from the SEC suspending a registration statement when an omission or a misstatement has been found.

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