Some brokers transmit stop orders to the relevant market as soon as they are placed. Other brokers hold stop orders internally until they become marketable and then transmit the order to the relevant market.
I'm wondering which method ET members feel is preferable. So that you'll know, I'm primarily interested in the answer with respect to stocks, although it would be interesting to know how this would work with futures and options.
I'm also wondering whether the answer may depend on whether the order is a conventional stop order (which converts to a market order when it becomes marketable) or a stop limit order (which converts to a limit order at a specified price when the order becomes marketable). Lastly, might the answer depend on what the relevant market is (e.g., NYSE, NASDAQ, AMEX, ARCA) and, if so, how so?
Many thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer here.
Best,
cwb1014

I'm wondering which method ET members feel is preferable. So that you'll know, I'm primarily interested in the answer with respect to stocks, although it would be interesting to know how this would work with futures and options.
I'm also wondering whether the answer may depend on whether the order is a conventional stop order (which converts to a market order when it becomes marketable) or a stop limit order (which converts to a limit order at a specified price when the order becomes marketable). Lastly, might the answer depend on what the relevant market is (e.g., NYSE, NASDAQ, AMEX, ARCA) and, if so, how so?
Many thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer here.
Best,
cwb1014