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Hoots : Market Close Order The stock today traded on low volume all day. Then at 3:59 PM 58,000 shares were sold? I am confused as to what is going on and will this have an impact on the stock price tomorrow morning at the opening - freshhoot.com

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Market Close Order
The stock today traded on low volume all day. Then at 3:59 PM 58,000 shares were sold? I am confused as to what is going on and will this have an impact on the stock price tomorrow morning at the opening bell?


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During the day, market and limit orders are submitted at any time by market participants and there is a bid and an ask that move around over time. Trades occur whenever a market order is submitted or a limit order is submitted that at a price that matches or exceeds an existing limit order. If you submit a market order, it may consume all best-price limit orders and you can get multiple prices, changing the bid or ask at the same time. All that stuff happens during the trading day only.

What happens at the end of the day is different. A bunch of orders that were submitted during the day but marked as "on close" are aggregated with any outstanding limit orders to create a single closing price according to the algorithm established by the exchange. Each exchange may handle the details of this closing event differently. For example, the Nasdaq's closing cross or the NYSE's closing auction.

The close is the most liquid time of the day, so investors who are trading large amounts and not interested in intraday swings will often submit a market-on-close or limit-on-close order. This minimizes their chance of affecting the price or crossing a big spread. It's actually most relevant for smaller stocks, which may have too little volume during the day to make big trades, but have plenty at the close. In short, the volume you see is due to these on-close orders.

The spike in volume most likely has no special information about what will happen overnight or the next day. It's probably just a normal part of the market for illiquid stocks.


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