Off-floor order Used for listed equity securities. (1) Order to buy or sell a security that originates off the floor of an exchange; customer orders originating with brokers, ...
off-floor order order to buy or sell a security that originates off the floor of an exchange. These are customer orders originating with brokers, as distinguished from orders of floor members trading for their own accounts (on-floor orders).
Off-Floor Order An investor's directive to buy or sell securities when that directive is given to a broker, not to a trader working on the trading floor of an exchange.
off-floor order An order placed by a client with a broker that does not occur on the floor of an exchange.
Used for listed equity securities. Off-floor order. Upswing An upward turn in a security's price after a period of falling prices. Uptick rule ...
Used for listed equity securities. Off-floor order. Up tick Used in the context of general equities. Plus tick.
Upstairs order Used for listed equity securities. Off-floor order. Upswing An upward turn in a security's price after a period of falling prices.
Third Market - Brokers and institutional investors that are not members of an exchange trading over the counter in exchange-listed securities. Third market transactions are sometimes known as off-floor orders.
Off-floor order. Up tick Used in the context of general equities. Plus tick. Uptick trade A term used to describe a transaction that took place at a higher price than the preceding transaction involving the same security. Related:Tick-test rules U.S.
Off-floor order. Upswing An upward turn in a security's price after a period of falling prices. Uptick rule SEC rule that selling short is allowed only on an up tick.
See also: Ticker tape, Long position, Funded pension plan, Forward rate, Expected return
 
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