What does it mean when the market opens and closes, and then there is also “After Hours Trading”?

by Michael - Penny Stock Pro on March 4, 2008

in Stock Market News


Question by Pdawg: What does it mean when the market opens and closes, and then there is also “After Hours Trading”?
Can someone please explain to me the difference between after hour trading and buying and selling stock during the market hours?

Thanks for the help!

Best answer:

Answer by gosh137
Market hours for the New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange and NASDAQ market, all based in New York City are 9:30am to 4:00pm eastern standard/daylight time. As stocks listed on these exchanges can also be listed on many other exchanges around the world (open when NYC is “sleeping”), if they trade when New York is closed, it is considered trading “after hours.”

Give your answer to this question below!

Incoming search:

  • after hours trading penny stocks
  • what does it mean if stock markets closed
  • what does after hours mean?
  • understand when the market opens and closes trading
  • stock exchange amature hour
  • penny stock after hours trading
  • market trend signal review
  • amature hour trading
  • after hours trading what does this signal
  • what does it mean when the stock market is closed

Related Posts:

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

trust.helps March 4, 2008 at 7:30 pm

As The Major Stock Exchanges in Tokyo, Hong Kong, London and New York etc, are open and closed at different times.

Big international companies can and are traded, After Hours !

Reply

Bob March 4, 2008 at 7:43 pm

Forget explanations about when other markets are open. If markets are open then you are trading during their “market hours”. You do not have to trade on an organized exchange at all.

There are Electronic Communications Networks, which are computers that match buy and sell orders among their customers without going to a normal exchange. These ECNs start earlier and end later than the regular exchanges as well as run during normal market hours.

ECNs were created for dealers/market makers and big institutions that wanted to be able to react to breaking news announced outside of normal market hours as well as solve some complicated technical liquidity problems that arise with trading large blocks of stock.

Some retail brokers have systems which allow the little guy to join in. Here is one example and the broker’s explanation:
http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investment_products/stocks/extended_hours_trading?refid=P-1062828&refpid=P-997323

Also, some brokers allow some of their customers to have direct access to the ECNs. I had to sign special releases and get management approval and prove that I was an extremely experienced trader in order to get this, because there are limited safeguards in the system and an amature can get himself into exxpensive trouble by routing his own orders and doing it wrong.

Reply

slavaret2 March 4, 2008 at 8:33 pm

Specialists / market makers must maintain an orderly market in securities during market hours which means they may have to step in and buy or sell for their own account to match incoming orders.

They are under no obligation to do it after hours. They simply match orders from buyers and sellers that must be limit orders only.

Reply

Leave a Comment

*