and
Even if you don't cancel the order today, as long as you don't close the deal, it will be cancelled the next day.
For example, if you bought a stock at 5.8, and now the stock price is lower than 5.8, you can't buy it, that is, if there is no deal, you don't want to buy it, so you cancel the order, so there will be no signs that you will continue to have a pending order at 5.8 the next day. If you want to buy it, you can entrust it the next day.
And even if you didn't cancel the order that day, if you didn't buy it before the afternoon close (the stock price didn't reach 5.8), that is, there was no deal, then even if you didn't cancel the order and forgot to cancel it, there would be no pending order the next day, and you automatically canceled it. Your entrustment the day before has expired, so you have to pay the bill again the next day if you want to buy it.
The entrusted trading of stocks is only valid for one day. If you don't close it, even if you forget to quit, you can't continue the next day, you can only entrust it again. However, if the entrustment is not revoked in the morning, it will remain valid in the afternoon.
From the change of market interest rate pricing, it is not difficult to see what