Stop market order

Modified on Thu, 19 Jun at 3:25 PM


Stop-Market order is a conditional order to buy or sell a futures contract when the Mark Price reaches a specified Stop Price. It only becomes active once that price condition is met after which it executes as a market order.


How It Works

  • Trigger Condition: The order is triggered only when the Mark Price reaches the Stop Price you define.

  • Once triggered, the order becomes a market order, meaning it will execute immediately at the best available price in the order book.

 Important

  • For a Buy Stop-Market Order, the Stop Price must be above the current Mark Price.

  • For a Sell Stop-Market Order, the Stop Price must be below the current Mark Price.

 Stages of a Stop-Market Order

  1. Untriggered – Waiting for the Mark Price to hit the Stop Price.

  2. Triggered – Becomes a live market order once the Stop Price is reached.

  3. Filled – Executes at the best market price available at that moment.

 Example

Let’s say the current Mark Price is $100.
 You place a 
Stop-Market Buy Order with a Stop Price of $105.

  • If the price rises to $105, your order is triggered and filled at the best available price.

  • If the price never hits $105, your order remains inactive.

Use Stop-Market orders to protect your positions or enter the market only when specific price levels are reached, ensuring better risk control.



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