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John
John
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T12:42:33+00:00 2026-05-28T12:42:33+00:00In: FINANCIAL LITERACY

What Is a Limit Order in the Nigerian Stock Market and How Does It Work?

What’s the meaning of limit order when I want purchase a share, and how is it important?

limit orderngxstock trading nigeria
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  1. Ochoyoda
    Ochoyoda Educator
    2026-05-28T16:00:09+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 4:00 pm

    A Limit Order is an instruction you give your broker or investment app telling them: “Buy or sell this share ONLY at my chosen price or better.” It gives you price control. Simple Example Suppose Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc shares are currently trading at: Market price = ₦72 But you believe ₦65 is aRead more

    A Limit Order is an instruction you give your broker or investment app telling them:
    “Buy or sell this share ONLY at my chosen price or better.”
    It gives you price control.
    Simple Example
    Suppose Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc shares are currently trading at:
    Market price = ₦72
    But you believe ₦65 is a better entry price.
    Instead of buying immediately at ₦72, you place a:
    Buy Limit Order at ₦65
    This means:
    Your order will only execute if the share price falls to ₦65 or below.
    If the price never drops to ₦65, your order will remain pending or expire.
    Difference Between Market Order and Limit Order
    Type
    Meaning
    Advantage
    Risk
    Market Order
    Buy immediately at current market price
    Fast execution
    You may pay higher price
    Limit Order
    Buy only at your chosen price
    Price control
    Order may never execute
    Why Limit Orders Are Important
    1. Protects You From Overpaying
    In volatile markets, prices can move quickly.
    A limit order helps you avoid:
    emotional buying,
    panic buying,
    sudden price spikes.
    Example: You intended buying at ₦100 but market suddenly jumps to ₦112.
    A market order may buy at ₦112.
    A limit order keeps your maximum at ₦100.
    2. Helps You Invest Strategically
    Good investors often decide:
    their entry price,
    target valuation,
    acceptable risk,
    before buying.
    Limit orders support discipline.
    3. Useful in Illiquid Nigerian Stocks
    On the Nigerian Exchange Group, some shares:
    have low trading volume,
    wide bid/ask spreads,
    sudden jumps.
    Without limit orders, you may get unfavorable pricing.
    4. Prevents Emotional Decisions
    Many beginners:
    see a stock rising,
    rush in,
    buy at inflated prices.
    Limit orders force patience.
    Example Using Real-Life Scenario
    Suppose:
    Zenith Bank Plc trades around ₦52.
    You decide:
    “I only want to buy if it drops to ₦48.”
    You place:
    Buy Limit Order = ₦48
    Possible outcomes:
    What Happens
    Result
    Price drops to ₦48
    Order executes
    Price stays above ₦48
    No purchase
    Price falls below ₦48
    You may buy cheaper
    Sell Limit Order
    Limit orders also work when selling.
    Example: You bought a share at ₦50 and want profit at ₦70.
    You can place:
    Sell Limit Order = ₦70
    The broker sells only when price reaches ₦70 or higher.
    One Important Disadvantage
    A limit order gives: ✅ price certainty
    but not: ❌ execution certainty
    Meaning:
    your desired price may never be reached.
    Sometimes investors miss opportunities because their limit price was too low.
    When Limit Orders Are Most Useful
    They are especially useful when:
    market is volatile,
    trading large amounts,
    buying illiquid shares,
    investing long term,
    trying to enter at fair valuation.
    When Market Orders May Be Better
    Market orders may make sense when:
    you urgently want the shares,
    the stock is highly liquid,
    price movement is small,
    long-term price difference is negligible.
    Practical Advice for Beginners
    For Nigerian retail investors using apps like:
    investbamboo.com
    troveapp.co
    investnaija.com
    limit orders are often safer than blindly buying “at market.”
    Especially during:
    earnings season,
    rights issues,
    market rallies,
    panic selloffs.
    A Good Investing Habit
    Before placing any order, ask yourself:
    What price do I believe is fair?
    Am I investing or reacting emotionally?
    If the stock drops after buying, will I regret not waiting?
    Limit orders help answer those questions with discipline rather than emotion.

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