On the Biconomy trading platform, users can buy and sell digital assets through various order types, with Market Orders and Limit Orders being the most common. Understanding their differences helps optimize trading strategies by balancing price control and execution speed.
What Is a Market Order?
Definition:
A Market Order is an order that executes immediately at the best available market price.
Characteristics:
• Fast Execution: Market orders are executed instantly at the best available price.
• Execution Priority: Market orders take precedence over limit orders and are filled as quickly as possible.
• Price Fluctuations: Due to market volatility, the final execution price may differ from the price at the time of placing the order.
When to Use Market Orders?
• When you want to buy or sell quickly without waiting for price fluctuations.
• When the market is highly volatile and immediate execution is preferred.
• When price is not a major concern, but execution speed is.
Example:
Suppose BTC is currently trading at $62,000, and you want to buy 1 BTC immediately using a Market Order.
• If the best available sell price is $62,100, your order will execute at $62,100.
• If there is low liquidity, part of your order may be filled at a higher price, resulting in slippage.
Risk Warning:
When market liquidity is low or price volatility is high, market orders may experience slippage, meaning some of your order might execute at a less favorable price, increasing your final trading cost.
What Is a Limit Order?
Definition:
A Limit Order allows users to set a maximum buy price or minimum sell price. The order will only execute if the market price reaches or surpasses the set price.
Characteristics:
• Price Control: Orders execute only when market prices meet the set conditions.
• Suitable for Strategic Trading: Traders can set buy or sell targets in advance.
• No Guaranteed Execution: If the market price never reaches the set price, the order may never execute.
When to Use Limit Orders?
• When you want to buy or sell at a specific price rather than accepting the current market price.
• For long-term investment strategies, such as setting a lower buy price and waiting for the market to dip.
• For large orders, to prevent market impact from a sudden price shift due to high trade volume.
Example:
Suppose BTC is currently trading at $62,000, but you want to buy at $60,000. You can place a Limit Order:
• If BTC drops to $60,000 or lower, your order will execute.
• If BTC never falls to $60,000, your order remains open until manually canceled or triggered.
Similarly, if you own BTC and want to sell at $65,000, you can set a Limit Sell Order. The system will automatically execute the trade once the market price reaches $65,000.
Risk Warning:
If the market price never reaches your set price, your limit order may remain unfilled indefinitely.
Market Order vs. Limit Order: Key Differences
(A comparative table is unavailable in this document.)
How to Use Market and Limit Orders on Biconomy
Using a Market Order:
Step 1: Go to the Biconomy trading page and select Spot Trading or Futures Trading.
Step 2: Choose Market Order in the order placement interface and enter the desired buy/sell quantity.
Step 3: Click “Buy” or “Sell”—your order executes instantly.
Using a Limit Order:
Step 1: Go to the Biconomy trading page and select Spot Trading or Futures Trading.
Step 2: Choose Limit Order, then enter your desired buy/sell price and quantity.
Step 3: Click “Buy” or “Sell”—your order remains open until the market price reaches your set price.
Summary
• Market Orders are ideal for traders who prioritize execution speed but may face slippage.
• Limit Orders are best for traders who want precise control over trade prices but may experience delayed execution.
• On the Biconomy trading platform, users can select the most suitable order type to optimize their trading experience.
Biconomy Reminder
Cryptocurrency trading carries risks. Please make investment decisions based on market conditions and personal trading strategies.