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Figure 6.2 shows a direct access trade, which can be summarized as follows:
Step 1. You decide you want to buy 100 shares of XYZ. The quoted price that you see is 40 bid and 40 1/4 ask. These are the actual, live prices at this instant.
Step 2. You fill out the order window to buy 100 XYZ at 40 1/4 because you have real-time quotes and therefore you know where the best price is. You send the order electronically to the execution servers at your broker.
Step 3. In milliseconds, the execution servers check your order for a series of compliance and margin issues and instantly routes it to the correct exchange or ECN for the fastest possible execution. There is no time wasted with human intervention.
Step 4. Confirmation of the execution is sent electronically to your broker; and
Step 5. Confirmation is electronically sent to you.
Step 6. You pay your broker a commission. The broker has no conflict from being paid by a trading firm, too.
This process can take from under one second to just a few seconds. However, no system is immune to an overcrowded market. At such times (like the "open" each morning), it can take several minutes.
The direct access process is efficient, fast, and results in consistently better price execution. That equals more money in your pocket.
0051-01.GIF
Figure 6.2
Direct Access Trade Process

 
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