Quote from ASusilovic:
Here is a piece of paper from Deutsche Bank ( unfortunately only in German language ), anlayzing consequences of the subprime crisis. At page 32 is a funny headline question ( translated ) :
"Have U.S. mortgage bankers been on drugs ?![]()
![]()
http://www.dbresearch.com/PROD/DBR_INTERNET_EN-PROD/PROD0000000000218883.pdf
Quote from moonriver:
so what happens to your resting orders if price jumps your stop loss and/or limit target orders?
Quote from RedDuke:
They will be triggered depnding on what type of orders they are.
These moves today of 100s of points within minutes (there was around 150 points move within 5 minutes) make me want to trade so badly, but it is against my rules to trade when book is so thin and spread is unreasonable, so I am on side lines salivating.
Quote from Chuck Krug:
A bear mkt is officially defined as a 20% fall from a previous peak,
such
as was
seen in the DAX this morning at 6,500
However, by looking at the 9 bear markets we have seen since April
1970,
and
using the DAX as our model, it is possible to see that mkts continue
very
poorly
after entering a bear phase. In fact it is an average of 10 months and
minus
25% of performance until the bottom is achieved. See below
Date of entry into bear No. of months til bottom Index move
to bottom
Apr 1970 19 -19.0%
July 1973 16 -18.6%
July 1986 19 -26.0%
Oct 1987 3 -22.0%
Aug 1990 5 -15.0%
Oct 1992 0 0.0%
Aug 1998 1 -19.0%
Mar 2001 24 -63.0%

Quote from moonriver:
Thanks,
let me just clarify this,
so if it jumps a target limit order, it will be filled at the limit?
A stop order (which should be native, right?) will be filled at (stop) market?
So stop orders or limit orders don't have to be traded thru/ touched?

