What is a Day Order?
A day order is typically submitted before the market opens or early in the trading day. If the order is not fully executed within the day, the unfilled portion is automatically canceled at the end of the trading day. This means a day order is only valid for the day and will not remain in the market waiting to be executed.
Day orders are very useful for investors who want to trade within the day and do not wish to carry over unfilled portions. It allows them to limit their orders to that day’s trading activities and adjust their strategies based on market conditions in a timely manner.
Key Points:
- A day order is an instruction to buy or sell a security at a particular price, valid only for the remaining trading hours of the day.
- If the trade is not triggered, the order will not be executed and will be canceled at the end of the trading day.
- Traders can choose other validity periods, but most limit orders are typically day orders.
Understanding Day Orders
A day order is one type of order duration that determines how long an order remains in the market before being canceled. For a day order, its validity period is the trading day. In other words, if the trader’s order is not executed or triggered within the day, it will be canceled. There are two examples of order duration types: one is a good-till-canceled (GTC) order, which remains active until manually canceled, and the other is an immediate-or-cancel (IOC) order, which is executed immediately or partially, with the unexecuted portion being canceled.
Day orders are often the default order duration on trading platforms. Thus, traders must specify a different validity period for their orders; otherwise, the orders will automatically become day orders. This means traders can use many different types of orders when placing a trade. However, as a default setting, most market orders are effectively day orders.
How to Use Day Orders
Day orders are very useful for ordering securities at specific price points, so traders do not need to monitor securities all day for the right moment to execute their orders. This helps traders monitor and trade multiple securities simultaneously. Before the market opens, traders analyze each security they are trading and place their orders based on their strategies. As individual orders are executed, traders take further action within the trading day.
Intraday traders often employ strategies to close positions before the market closes. Therefore, if an order fails to be executed by the end of the trading day, the trader will cancel the order. But with day orders, this process is automated, making day orders more favorable for intraday traders.