Articles

Education

The Last Stock Price Is Not Always Your Execution Price

By Walid Mograbi · · 2 min read

The number you notice on the chart can be only the last completed trade, not the price you are actually about to receive.

Why this lesson matters

This lesson explains a practical market concept, why it matters, and the main mistakes to avoid before acting.

The core idea

Practical example

Consider a small real-world decision in stocks. Pause to review the mechanism, the cost, and the main risk before acting.

Common mistakes to avoid

Quick checklist

Key takeaway

A good lesson improves judgment, risk control, and execution discipline before it changes action.

Important caution

Educational content is not a personal recommendation or a guaranteed signal.

Further reading

#stocks #execution #bid-ask-spread #market-orders