Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Futures platform - Why can't the stock be sold at the limit?
Why can't the stock be sold at the limit?
Because: 1, after the daily limit of a stock, retail investors generally believe that the stock will continue to have a daily limit and continue to hold it, so that they can enjoy greater profits, which leads them not to sell.

2. When a stock is at the daily limit, it buys more and closes more when it is at the daily limit. Stimulated by buying and sealing orders, investors will not sell, or the daily limit of a stock is mostly driven by some good news, which is one of the reasons why investors do not sell at the daily limit.

After the daily limit of the stock, there is a high probability that it will continue to rise on the second trading day, so it is not recommended to sell it. If the stock opens after the daily limit, then investors can sell it. This situation shows that the stock is not strong, and the probability of subsequent decline is relatively large.

The daily limit of stock refers to the daily limit of stock. After the daily limit, the price is blocked, but it can be traded. There is no price limit on the first trading day of IPO in Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets, and the price limit after the first trading day is 65,438+00%. Growth Enterprise Market and science and technology innovation board IPO are not subject to price limit for the first five trading days, and the price limit is 20% after five trading days.

Why can't the stock be sold at the limit?

No matter the price priority or the quantity priority, as long as your order is large and the price is in the first place, you will give priority to the transaction, and now the A-share stock adopts the matching mechanism, and you can only buy it when others don't want chips. If you don't trade, you can only continue to close the daily limit.

But as far as the main players are concerned, they have VIP channels and can give priority to investors' transactions. We can also see that they have an advantage over investors in trading, which is also an unequal behavior in trading. Then why can the daily limit only be sold but not bought? The reason is that the purchase and sale orders are not equal.

When a stock goes up, it can theoretically continue to buy through pending orders, but if there is no selling order, it can't buy, because no one wants to sell, and there is no matching process when there are too many pending orders, so it is difficult to buy, but once the shareholders who have chips in their hands are willing to sell, the buying orders will naturally sell at this time. There is also the fact that the main force mentioned above will basically have a pending order in front, which will lead to investors not being able to buy it if the main force closes the board. To close the deal, the main force will pay the bill first, and then consider the investor's queuing list.

The daily limit means that the number of purchases is much greater than the number of sales, while the daily limit is the opposite, and the number of sales is greater than the number of purchases. Whether it is the daily limit or the daily limit, there is bound to be trading volume, and the trend of stocks without trading volume is very abnormal. Whether it is a good stock or a bad stock, there will be trading volume. In each trading day, the trading volume is just different.