Market Order

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

An order to buy or sell a security immediately at the best available current price. Execution is virtually guaranteed, but the exact price is unknown until the order is filled. Market orders prioritize speed of execution over price certainty.

Example

An investor places a market order to buy 100 shares of a liquid stock trading at $50.25. The order executes immediately at $50.26 (the best ask price). In contrast, if the same investor uses a market order for a thinly traded stock, the price could move significantly between order placement and execution due to wide bid-ask spreads.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse guaranteed execution with guaranteed price. Market orders guarantee the trade will execute (assuming market is open and security is trading), but NOT at a specific price. The filled price can be worse than expected, especially in volatile or illiquid markets.

How This Is Tested

  • Determining when market orders are appropriate based on liquidity and volatility conditions
  • Understanding the trade-off between execution certainty (market order) and price certainty (limit order)
  • Recognizing the risk of price slippage in market orders for thinly traded securities
  • Identifying suitability of market orders for clients prioritizing immediate execution vs price control
  • Understanding how market orders interact with bid-ask spreads and market depth

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

David wants to immediately exit his position in a highly liquid large-cap stock due to breaking negative news. He is willing to accept the current market price to ensure his order executes quickly. His investment adviser representative should recommend which type of order?

Question 2

What is the primary characteristic that distinguishes a market order from other order types?

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Question 3

An investment adviser representative has a client who wants to purchase shares of a thinly traded small-cap stock. The stock has a current bid of $18.50 and an ask of $19.25, with only a few thousand shares traded daily. Which of the following is the MOST appropriate recommendation?

Question 4

All of the following statements about market orders are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A client asks their investment adviser representative to explain when market orders would be most appropriate. Which of the following situations favor the use of market orders?

1. The security is highly liquid with tight bid-ask spreads
2. The client prioritizes immediate execution over price control
3. The security is experiencing high volatility with rapidly changing prices
4. The client is trading a large position in a thinly traded security

💡 Memory Aid

Market Order = "FAST Pass": Forget About Specific Targets. You get FAST execution but give up control over the exact price. Think of it like an amusement park fast pass: you skip the line (guaranteed execution) but pay whatever the current price is at that moment. Best for liquid securities when speed matters more than price.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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