Quote from Razorsharp:
After that price kind of stabalized and droped again.
The contract i traded was comex GC, that is what is says on the platform.
i guess i should read that document you are reffering to but i never expected that kind of slippage in my life under normal trading conditions.
thanks for the reply.
Comex is owned by the CME Group and the electronic GC contract trades on the Globex platform.
http://www.cmegroup.com/trading/metals/precious/gold_contract_specifications.html
In all seriousness, you really should know everything there is to know about a contract before you risk a single lot on it.
The opening of the pit session can sometimes cause the order book to get really thin and things to bounce around, but if your transaction was at around 8.10am CST then this clearly isn't the reason.
I am curious about this one. Can you answer the following questions and I'll have a look the T&S and order book data:
1. What contract are you trading? I'm assuming here that you are trading the G (Feb) contract.
2. What was the stop price of your order?
3. What time did you enter the stop market order with Globex? I'm assuming here you placed the order with the exchange and didn't simulate it on your local machine.
4. What time did the order get executed? (down to the second)
5. What price did you get executed at?
Looking at the past week's chart I can see that there would have been a load of resting sell stop orders around the 1125 level as it has offered significant 'support' over the last few days. A lot of those orders would have been entered several days ago so your intraday order would have been at the back of a very long queue.
If I'd have been short the GC yesterday morning I'd have been gunning for those stops. I suspect there were no dirty dealings here. Sadly, you just got played...