Showing posts with label stockmarket terminology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stockmarket terminology. Show all posts

Monday, 25 June 2012

Averaging Meaning

Averaging

Averaging Up Definition

          Averaging Up is an investment strategy in which additional amounts are invested in an asset as its price rises. This will raise the average price paid for all of the shares, but that average cost is still lower than the security's current market price. The profit is the difference between the average cost and the current price and protecting it necessitates selling while the stock is rising or shortly after it has peaked.

Averaging Down Definition

          Averaging Down is an investment strategy in which additional amounts are invested in an asset if there is a substantial drop in its price after the original investment is made. This course of action is used by investors who plan to hold the assets for an extended period of time, have long-term investment goals and typically invest against the current investment trend.




All or None (AON Order) Definition


All or None (AON Order) Definition

              All or None is an instruction from a client to the broker that is included in a buy/sell order to fill the complete order or disregard it. In essence “Get me the entire quantity or don’t get me any.”
             

             Keep in mind different brokers and exchanges will handle this order differently - if accepting AON orders at all. This order is used most commonly on stocks that trade on low average volumes. Low volume stocks are characterized by wider bid and offer prices and partial fills can be expensive. 

           Time and time again novices will try and place these AON terms on liquid stocks when it is not necessary. Often AON orders get routed into a special 'terms book' that requires manual entry by someone at the exchange level which is not efficient.

          Ask your broker when unsure about order types or exchange rules.