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
- Understand the concept before acting on it.
- Focus on execution quality, risk, and evidence instead of hype.
- Use the lesson as a checklist, not as a promise.
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
- Turning one indicator or headline into a complete decision process.
- Ignoring risk, fees, or execution details.
- Acting before checking the source material.
Quick checklist
- Define the concept in plain language.
- Check the main risk or cost.
- Review the source material before acting.
- Keep the lesson educational rather than predictive.
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
- Types of Orders | Investor.gov
- Bid Price/Ask Price | Investor.gov
- Trading ETFs Market Orders Explained | NYSE
#stocks #execution #bid-ask-spread #market-orders