Trade Execution

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The process of completing a securities transaction by matching buyers with sellers and finalizing the trade at a specific price. Execution involves transmitting orders to market venues (exchanges, market makers, ECNs), receiving fills, and confirming transaction details. Investment advisers and broker-dealers have a duty to seek best execution: the most favorable terms reasonably available considering price, speed, likelihood of execution and settlement, commission costs, and market impact. Execution occurs on the trade date, while settlement (actual exchange of securities and payment) typically occurs one business day later (T+1 for equities as of May 2024).

Example

An adviser receives a client order to buy 1,000 shares of XYZ stock at 10:00 AM when it is trading at $50.00. The adviser evaluates execution venues and routes the order to a market maker that executes the trade at $49.98 (2 cents better than market price) within 30 seconds. This demonstrates quality trade execution: fast completion with price improvement, benefiting the client despite paying a small commission.

Common Confusion

Trade execution is NOT the same as settlement. Execution occurs when the trade is completed and the price is locked in (trade date). Settlement occurs one business day later (T+1 for equities as of May 2024) when securities and cash actually change hands. Also, trade execution does NOT mean lowest price only. Best execution requires evaluating multiple factors: price, speed, certainty of execution, commission costs, and market impact to achieve the most favorable overall terms.

How This Is Tested

  • Distinguishing between trade execution (when price is locked in) and settlement (when securities and cash transfer)
  • Evaluating which execution venue provides best execution based on multiple factors, not just price
  • Understanding execution quality factors: price improvement, fill rate, speed, and market impact
  • Recognizing that advisers must seek best execution across all factors, not just lowest commission or price
  • Identifying execution date (T) versus settlement date (T+1 for equities) for calculating holding periods and other deadlines

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Best execution factors (qualitative) Price, speed of execution, likelihood of execution and settlement, size of order, nature of market No single factor is determinative; must consider totality of circumstances for each trade
Best execution factors (quantitative) Commission costs, bid-ask spreads, market impact costs, price improvement Must evaluate all costs and price quality, not just commission rates
Standard settlement cycle for equities T+1 (one business day after trade execution) Applies to equity transactions as of May 28, 2024; corporate bonds still T+2
Execution documentation Trade confirmations must be sent to clients at or before settlement Confirms execution price, quantity, commission, and settlement date

Example Exam Questions

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

Question 1

Jennifer, an investment adviser, needs to execute a client order to buy 10,000 shares of a moderately liquid stock currently trading at $25.00 per share. She evaluates three execution venues: Venue A offers instant execution at $25.02 with guaranteed fill on the entire order. Venue B offers execution at $25.00 but can only guarantee 7,000 shares immediately, with the remaining 3,000 shares filled over the next hour at prevailing market prices. Venue C offers potential execution at $24.98 but cannot guarantee timing or complete fill. The client needs the position established quickly for portfolio rebalancing. Which venue demonstrates best execution?

Question 2

Which of the following BEST describes the best execution obligation in trade execution?

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Question 3

An investment adviser executes 500 client trades over a quarter through a single broker-dealer that charges commissions 10% higher than the market average. Post-trade analysis shows the broker achieved an average price improvement of $0.04 per share better than the national best bid/offer (NBBO), filled 99.8% of orders completely on first execution, and completed trades averaging 15 seconds faster than competing venues. The adviser maintains quarterly execution quality reports documenting this analysis. Has the adviser satisfied the best execution obligation?

Question 4

All of the following statements about trade execution and settlement are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser is evaluating the execution quality provided by a broker-dealer for client equity trades. Which of the following are appropriate factors to consider when assessing execution quality?

1. The percentage of orders receiving price improvement versus the national best bid/offer (NBBO)
2. The average time between order submission and execution completion
3. The broker-dealer's willingness to provide the adviser with free research and analysis
4. The percentage of orders filled completely on first execution versus requiring multiple partial fills

💡 Memory Aid

Think of trade execution like ordering a package: Execution = confirming your order (price locked in, committed). Settlement = package arrives 1 day later (you actually get it, T+1 for stocks). The purchase happens when you click "buy" (trade date), not when it arrives (settlement date). For best execution, you want the best overall deal (price, speed, reliability), not just the cheapest shipping.

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Where This Appears on the Exam

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