Orders and positions FAQs
Find out all about orders and positions with our FAQs, covering the different types of orders available, how to place a trade/order, hedging your position and more.
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Use our advanced search to explore support pages- What is the difference between a trade and an order?
- How do I place a trade/order?
- What is a stop entry order?
- What is a stop loss order?
- What is a limit order?
- What is a limit closing order?
- What is slippage?
- What is a guaranteed stop loss order?
- How do I place a guaranteed stop loss order?
- What is a trailing stop loss order?
- How do I amend/cancel orders?
- Am I able to amend orders at any time?
- Are orders active even when the markets are closed?
- Why was my order rejected after it triggered?
- How long can I hold my positions for?
- Can I roll my futures position, and how do I do this?
- Why has my position been closed?
- What do I do if I have a trade query?
- What is a corporate action?
- Do corporate actions affect my account?
- Do I receive dividends in the same way as if I was holding shares?
- Where can I find margin requirement, spreads and minimum stake sizes for markets?
- What is your minimum market cap for US/UK/Euro stocks that I can trade?
- Does the daily change indicator on the trading platform show the change on the day for each market?
- What is price tolerance?
- How do I adjust price tolerance?
- Can I hedge positions in my account?
- How do I hedge my positions?
- How does margin work with hedging?
- How does financing work with hedged trades?
- How do corporate actions work with hedged trades?
- How are non-expiring commodities (NEC) priced?
- What is a 'limit down'?
What is the difference between a trade and an order?
You can amend or cancel orders by clicking your order and selecting 'edit order', which can be found in the 'orders' tab on the trading platform.
How do I place a trade/order?
You can place a trade or order via the deal ticket on any of our trading platforms. For a step-by-step guide on placing a trade, please see our how to trade CFDs page.
You can also place trades/orders over the telephone by calling our client services team; however the minimum trade size for phone trades may be higher.
What is a stop entry order?
A stop entry order is an instruction to place a trade at a specified price that is worse than the level at the time of placing the order. This will only be executed should 'market price' reach the level of your order.
Example
If the Australia 200 is at 7500, you may choose to execute a stop entry order to sell 10 CFDs if the level falls to 7400. Therefore if 'market price' falls by 100 points we will automatically open the above trade for you.
Please note that orders may be subject to slippage; see here for more details.
What is a stop loss order?
A stop loss order is an order that is put in place to limit the risk of a market moving against a current position. Stop losses are used to close trades at a predetermined level, and limit the amount you could lose on a trade. Using a stop loss is an essential part of maintaining an efficient trading strategy.
If the open position is closed, either by an opposing trade or order activation, then the stop loss will be cancelled.
Example
If you enter into a long Australia 200 trade at 7500 , you may choose to leave a linked stop loss order at 7400 . Therefore if 'market price' falls by 100 points we will automatically close your trade, helping you to avoid any further losses.
Please note that orders may be subject to slippage; see here for more details.
What is a limit order?
A limit order is an instruction to place a trade at a specified price that is more advantageous to you than the level at the time of placing the order. This will only be executed should the market's price reach the level of your order. For more information on limit orders, see our guide to orders page.
Example
If the Australia 200 is at 7500, you may choose to leave a limit order to sell 100 CFDs if the level reaches 7600. Therefore if the market's price rises by 100 points we will automatically open this trade for you.
Please note that orders may be subject to slippage; see here for more details.
What is a limit closing order?
A limit closing order is linked to an open position on your account. Limits are designed to close trades at a predetermined profit level, protecting you in case the market's price falls.
If that open position is closed, either by an opposing trade or by an order activation, then the linked limit will be cancelled.
Example
If you enter into a long Australia 200 trade at 7500, you may choose to leave a linked limit order at 7600. Therefore if the market's price rises by 100 points, we will automatically close your trade, helping you lock in your profit.
Please note that orders may be subject to slippage; see question below for more details.
What is slippage?
Slippage can occur when there is insufficient liquidity in the underlying market to fill your order at your specified price. These 'market gaps' occur when prices either jump or fall from one price to another with very little to no trading in between prices. This can happen when the market adjusts to news. For example, if a company announces worse-than-expected profits, its share price may fall from $50 to $47, without trading at $48, $49 etc. If this were to occur then we would be unable to execute orders at prices where the underlying market did not trade; orders would be filled at the next available price.
What is a guaranteed stop loss order?
A guaranteed stop loss order or GSLO is an order that closes your trade at an exact level chosen by you, regardless of market gapping. A regular stop loss may not cover you in times of heightened volatility where markets can “gap” between one price and the next without trading at the prices in between.
At City Index you can add a GSLO to a wide range of our markets and will only pay a premium for added protection if your GSLO is triggered. You can read more about GSLOs at City Index in our dedicated Trading Academy section.
How do I place a guaranteed stop loss order?
You can leave a guaranteed stop loss order when you open a trade either online or by phone. You may also add a guaranteed stop loss order to an existing trade provided it is within trading hours. For orders placed via the trading platform, you need to select the drop down arrow next to 'stop loss' and then select the 'guaranteed' option next to the stop loss value.
You will only be charged a premium for your GSLO if your order is triggered. Please be advised that you can place/amend/update your GSLOs within market hours for free, minimum distances apply. Minimum distance will be shown on the deal ticket.
What is a trailing stop loss order?
A trailing stop loss order is a powerful risk management tool, helping you to minimise potential losses, without setting a limit on your potential gains.
A trailing stop is created by setting a stop order that 'trails' your position by a specific number of points. If your trade moves in your favour, the trailing stop moves with the market, executing only when the market moves against you by the set number of points.
The trailing stop is more flexible than a fixed stop loss, since it automatically tracks the market's price direction and does not have to be manually reset, as you would have to with a fixed stop loss.
How do I amend/cancel orders?
You can amend or cancel orders by clicking your order and selecting 'edit order', which can be found in the 'orders' tab on the trading platform.
Am I able to amend orders at any time?
Yes, you can amend orders on your positions at any time, including out-of-hours trading. Guaranteed orders are the only exception to this and can be amended only during market hours.
Are orders active even when the markets are closed?
Orders are only monitored and executed during City Index trading hours (and not necessarily during the underlying market trading hours). We will execute any triggered orders at the first available price in our opening hours for cases where the markets continue to trade outside of City Index hours. Therefore, this may be different to the original order level if the market has gapped.
Why was my order rejected after it triggered?
Your order may have been rejected due to a number of reasons, including insufficient funds. Orders are subject to sufficient funds being in the account at the time the order was triggered, and not when the order was placed.
How long can I hold my positions for?
CFDs: There is no expiry for a CFD trade (unless it is a CFD future) and you may hold it for an unlimited period, as long as you have enough funds in your account to cover margin. Please remember that you will, however, be charged a daily overnight financing fee.
Can I roll my futures position, and how do I do this?
Yes, it is possible to roll a futures position. This can be done through the platform on the deal ticket when opening a trade, or in the active positions window.
Why has my position been closed?
Positions may be automatically closed out either due to an attached order triggering, a futures contract reaching expiry or due to your margin falling below the margin close out level. Please see the margin and leverage section for more information about our margin policy.
What do I do if I have a trade query?
You can raise trade queries/disputes by calling our Client Support Team.
What is a corporate action?
A corporate action is an event initiated by a company that will affect all positions in that market. Some of these will have a direct action on the price such as dividends, some are indirect such as stock splits and some have little to no impact such as a name change.
Do corporate actions affect my account?
Yes, your account is subject to any corporate actions occurring in the underlying market. All corporate actions (excluding dividends) will be emailed to you prior to the event. This is known as the instruction date. Depending on the corporate action, you may have to make a decision about what you would like the positions on your account to do. You will have until the instruction deadline date noted in the email to decide. Corporate actions are free of commission.
Please note that in the event of any positions being closed and reopened, working orders will be cancelled.
Do I receive dividends in the same way as if I was holding shares?
Yes, CFD accounts are subject to dividend adjustments intended to replicate the net dividend payment applicable to the ordinary share. A dividend adjustment is credited to long positions and debited from short positions held at the close of business on the day before the ex-dividend date. Payment is then credited/debited to your account around the ex-dividend date. Dividends should not result in a profit or loss impact on customers' accounts, as the underlying instrument will open lower on the ex-date by the amount of the dividend.
Due to new tax regulations under U.S. code section 871 (m), there have been changes to the way U.S. equity dividend adjustments paid to clients on CFDs on shares in U.S. incorporated companies. Please visit our page on US code section 871(m) for more information.
Where can I find margin requirement, spreads and minimum stake sizes for markets?
This information can be found by clicking on the market information icon for a specified market. These are located immediately to the right of the trade and order buttons on the trading platform.
What is your minimum market cap for US/UK/Euro stocks that I can trade?
There is no set minimum, but we are reluctant to offer markets for stocks with a market cap of less than $250m or equivalent and US stocks with a market cap of less than $1b. If you wish to short a market, then the minimum market cap will be higher. Please contact Customer Support if you wish to enquire about trading a market that we are not listing.
Does the daily change indicator on the trading platform show the change on the day for each market?
Our daily change indicator will reflect the movement of each market on that day. However, as many of our markets run outside of market hours, such as the FTSE 100 (UK 100), the daily change may not accurately reflect the daily change during underlying market hours. As such, our daily change indicator is an indication only. Please see bid and offer for tradable quotes.
What is price tolerance?
Price tolerance is the price level within which our trading platform may execute your trade immediately even if at the time of execution, the price has moved away from that specified by you.
Markets where Price tolerance applies will have default tolerance levels set, but they may be altered by you on the trading platform. Our default on the platform is set to “Market Order”.
If you don't want any slippage in execution price, you can manually set your price tolerance level to fill or kill for each market. This will mean that if we receive a trade request and the price is different, the trade will be rejected, and a new trade must be requested.
How do I adjust price tolerance?
If you want to change your price tolerance level, you can do so by amending the Tolerance levels set within the market information or through the Advanced ticket for each market affected by price tolerance (see below image).
If however, you want to remove price tolerance completely, you can do so by setting the price tolerance level to 'fill or kill' for the relevant market. This will mean that should our trade execution price move, you will need to submit a new trade request.
Look at the example below using the Commonwealth Bank of Australia CFD market information:
Can I hedge positions in my account?
Yes, we allow you to go both long and short in the same market on a non-FIFO basis. FIFO stands for 'first in first out'. If you have multiple trades in the same market, the first position to close is the first position placed in that market.
Non-FIFO allows you to open and close positions in the same market in any direction you wish. It doesn't prevent you from closing the first trade you placed, it simply gives you greater flexibility to open and close multiple positions in multiple directions. All our Accounts are Non-FIFO.
Example
If you are long the Australia 200 by 5 CFDs, you can also go short the Australia 200 to hedge all or some of your original trade. In order to do this you must use the hedge button.
How do I hedge my positions?
When you launch the deal ticket, you'll see a tick box option to hedge. If you tick this box, this will open a new position in the direction you've chosen, regardless of whether you currently have any open positions in the same market. If this is the first position within a particular market, the button will have no effect as effectively; there is no original position to hedge.
Hedge example
- You have an open sell 10 position in the Wall Street market
- You launch a new Wall Street deal ticket
- You decide to buy Wall Street with a quantity of 5
- To place this trade independently of your original short 10 position, you need to activate the hedge button and place the trade
- Please note that if you don't activate the hedge button, this will effectively close 5 of your original short positions
- You now have two positions open in the Wall Street market. One buy position of 5 and one sell position of 10, meaning you are now net short 5 in total.
- You can also close either position independently at any time.
You must also be aware that if you have amalgamated positions turned on, this will show the net figures for the total trades placed i.e. inclusive of all shorts or longs in a specific market. To see individual positions, you need to expand the amalgamated position or switch to single positions.
How does margin work with hedging?
You're only charged margin on the larger side of the trade, or the original leg of the trade if you have hedged net flat. Using the example above, you would only have been charged margin on the original Wall Street short 10 position, and not any hedged trade thereafter which is smaller than the initial trade.
Trade example
- You open a sell 10 Wall Street with an initial margin of $1400
- You then open a buy 5 Wall Street trade with a margin of $700 (hedged trade)
As the margin is bigger on the Open sell 10 Wall Street trade, this will be the total margin required for all trades in this market. We do this to ensure that you have enough margin to cover the remaining position if and when the larger side is closed. The same rule applies for all step margin levels.
How does financing work with hedged trades?
Finance charges work on a per-trade basis. This means you'll be charged overnight financing charges relating to each specific trade you place, regardless of whether they are a hedged position or not.
How do corporate actions work with hedged trades?
Corporate actions will be applied on a per-trade basis, not as an overall value.
How are non-expiring commodities (NEC) priced?
To price these non-expiring markets, we use two sufficiently liquid futures contracts on the underlying commodity. This is usually the two with the nearest expiry date.
The contract with the closest expiry date is called the Front month contract and the second-nearest expiry date is called the Far month contract.
Throughout the duration of the Front month contract, the price of the NEC will gradually move from the price of the front month to the price of the far month.
As there will be an adjustment to the NEC Market price every day, your account will be subject to an adjustment in the form of a Credit/Debit to offset this price adjustment. For example, if the NEC contract is adjusted by +2 points, clients with long positions will be debited 2 x stake and clients with short positions will be credited 2 x stake. See further explanation and video below.
In our video, the front month is labelled ‘A’ and the far month ‘B’.
NEC contract market prices move from the price of market ‘A’ towards the price of market ‘B’ as the expiry date of ‘A’ becomes closer. The price of market ‘B’ may be higher or lower, depending on the commodity, than that of market ‘A’.
Daily adjustments for NEC contract markets reflect a day’s movement from ‘A’ towards ‘B’.
What is a 'limit down'?
A limit down price is the maximum sell-off permitted in a market on a single day of trading. Once this level has been reached, trading on the market may then be restricted to prevent significant volatility and potential panic selling. A limit down price is typically determined as a percentage decline in a given market, rather than a nominal decline in price.
A limit down period is imposed by an exchange (such as the NYSE) and not by brokers. It usually lasts 15 minutes but may be extended depending on the percentage decline before market open.
Please note that a limit down only restricts selling on the affected market(s).