How are Imbalances Calculated?

Could someone manipulate the MOC imbalance by posting a large buy/sell order hoping to push the market in one direction then cancel and take the other side? Is this common?
 
M.O.C. orders have to be entered before 3:40 PM and may not be canceled.

If you have to get out of the order, the only way is to enter an opposite MARKET order as close to the bell as possible and you are in no way guaranteed the prices pair off.
 
Quote from brobiche:

Could someone manipulate the MOC imbalance by posting a large buy/sell order hoping to push the market in one direction then cancel and take the other side? Is this common?

Surdo is right that the MOC orders can not be canceled (the rules are a bit more complicated, but basically that is it). They can be entered at any time up till the close (except I think on quad witch Fridays...you have to check the rules), but after 3:40, they can only be entered to OFFSET any imbalance, otherwise the order gets rejected. So if at 3:40 he shows a buy imbalance, you could only enter a MOC to sell.
Sometimes what happens is the imbalance might flip from a buy to a sell or vice versa, between the first publication at 3:40, the second at 3:50 & the close, depending on how many MOC orders he gets after 3:40 to offset. He could get none, some, all, or more of the imbalance amount than he needs in that 20 minutes.
You can search on nyse.com for "moc imbalance" if you want to read the memos for the exact rules. They give some examples in there too.
So to answer your question, no they can not do that.
 
Does the specialist take the other side of the trade if an imbalance exists at 4:00 pm? In other words, are all orders filled despite an imbalance?

Don, an answer.
 
1. A NYSE specialist will often take the other side but will try to attract natural buyer's/seller's first.

2.Yes, they are filled because they are "Market Order's".
 
Quote from Surdo:

1. A NYSE specialist will often take the other side but will try to attract natural buyer's/seller's first.

2.Yes, they are filled because they are "Market Order's".

Any studies out there or anecdotal evidence regarding next day openings after imbalances?
 
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