
Market orders
What is a market order?
A market order is an order to buy or sell an asset at the current best available price. It is executed immediately but does not guarantee a specific price in extreme market conditions (for example big volatility on a macroeconomic release).
When to use a market order
When immediate execution is more important than price.
During high-volume trading hours, when spreads are tighter.
For entering or exiting trades quickly in fast-moving markets.
For example, if you want to buy EURUSD immediately. You place a market order, and it executes at the next available price.
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What is a limit order?
A limit order is an order to buy or sell at a specified price. It ensures price control but does not guarantee excellent execution.
Types of limit orders:
When to use a limit order
When looking to buy at a discount or sell at a premium.
For precise entry and exit points in a trading strategy.
To avoid negative slippage.
For example, suppose you want to buy XAUUSD (Gold) at $2700, but the current price is $2800. You place a buy limit order at $2700, and your trade only executes if the price falls to this level or lower.
Risks of limit orders:
Slippage. In a volatile market, the order may be executed at a worse price due to extremely big short-term moves.
Missed trades. The order is not executed if the price does not reach the limit.
Stop orders

What is a stop order?
A stop order becomes a market order once the price reaches a specified level. It is usually used in continuation of a trend or a breakout confirmation.
Types of stop orders:
Buy stop order. Triggers a buy when the price moves above a set level (used in breakout strategies or on a continuation of a trend).
Sell stop order. Triggers a sell when the price moves below a set level.
When to use a stop order
To enter trades when the price confirms momentum.
To achieve multiple profits with the artingale strategy.
To limit risk by placing an opposite stop order.
For example, say you own Tesla stock at $400 but want to limit losses. You place a sell stop order at $350 because it will confirm the beginning of a downtrend. If TSLA drops to $350, the order converts into a market order and sells at the best available price.
Risks of stop orders:
Slippage. If the price moves quickly past the stop level, execution may occur at a worse price.
Triggered by volatility. Short-term price fluctuations may activate stops unnecessarily.
Missed trades. The order is not executed if the price does not reach the level.
Stop-limit orders

What is a stop-limit order?
A stop-limit order combines features of a stop order and a limit order. It only executes within a predefined price range.
How it works:
Example:
You set a buy stop-limit order on GBPUSD with a stop price at 1.2500 and a limit price at 1.2480. If the price rises to 1.2500, the limit order will be placed at 1.2480.
When to use a stop-limit order
Risks of stop-limit orders:
Comparing order types – a summary table
Order type | Purpose | Execution | Risk |
Market order | Instant trade execution | Immediate at best available price | Slippage possible |
Limit order | Buy/sell at a specific price or better | Only executes at a set price | Slippage possible |
Stop order | Activates order at a price breakout | Only executes at a set price | Slippage possible |
Stop-limit order | Activates limit order at a price level | Executes within a price range | May not execute |
Key takeaways
Market orders ensure execution but may experience slippage.
Limit orders allow precision but may not fill.
Stop orders help manage risk and enter breakout trades.
Stop-limit orders combine stop and limit benefits but carry execution risk.
Using the right order type based on your strategy can optimize trading efficiency. By mastering these order types, traders can improve trade execution, reduce risks, and enhance profitability in different market conditions.
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