Originally posted by DATTrader
If I see everything about to go bad, I can hit the biggest bid I can find with a "sell default position size" hot key and close the entire position with one keystroke at which point the open sell orders at the offer prices are automatically cancelled. Obviously, I have these types of keys set for each execution method (SS, Direct ECNS, etc)
By the way the same logic works when opening positions. With decimalization and current market conditions, rarely do I just take an offer or hit a bid with one execution for 1000 shares to open. For longs, I will place a bid or two at and/or below the bid (once I have decided to buy) while perhaps simultaneously taking an offer or two for 100 shares if the stock looks like it is running. If it runs hard right from the getgo, sure I missed some by not taking the whole position at once but that does not happen very often these days. By paring in and being patient with the bids, I can improve my average cost and give my self more room in trade, but I am always just a keystroke away from taking offers if condition warrants. The nice part is that if it does run, I am likely able to get shares at the offer/bid when there is momentum that many others (not trading on one of these platforms) would miss.
PS I was just kidding about the right eye left eye stuff....I can't really do that![]()
I usually jump into positions 500, sometimes 1000 shares at a time... but after reading your post earlier in this thread last week about scaling in and out for 200 shares at a time, I tried trading/scaling in and out 200 shares at a time up to my full position size...
Gotta say, it works out pretty well. Gives you a chance to feel out the little 5 cent twitches in a stock while it's churning and digesting its previous move and setting up for its next move.
Certainly beats jumping in for 1000 at a time, only to realize your buyer is only refreshing so he can drop the second you pay.