Rembember the pillar of salt? Lot's wife. Indiana Jones and the melting Nazis? Yeah, it's...not that.
In a financial context, a lot is a fixed quantity of units and defined by the exchange. For stocks, a round lot is a number that can be divided by 100. Odd lots are numbers less than 100, or numbers not divisible by 100. If you were to order a lot in a quantity that combined those two, such as 130, it's a mixed lot.
It would be broken into a round lot of 100, and an odd lot of 30. Exchange-traded securities work with lots of 100. Institutional investors buy debts from bond issuers in large quantities...U.S. government bonds start trading at $1 million. Municipal bonds start smaller, at $100,000. Lesser amounts are known as odd lots.
See: Round Lot. See: Odd Lot.
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Finance: What is Odd Lot Theory?37 Views
finance a la shmoop what is odd lot theory
well odd lot theory is an investment notion that presupposes that retail [Woman investor appears giving thumbs up]
investors are idiots the theory here is that when you see a lot of trades with
odd Lots you should basically do the opposite of what those trades are doing
like you know buying up a stock or selling down a stock or something like [Man throws stock away]
that well odd Lots are basically just small
order amounts like 22 shares here in 58 shares there in 77 shares here there and
everywhere and the idea is that odd Lots are almost always traded by small retail
investors who can't afford large blocks of stock and aren't wealthy so the [Stack of cash blows away]
presumption is that they're not experienced in stock market or have the
education or training to actually be making real trade schooled professional [Fire extinguisher blows out fire]
institutional investors who generally know what they're doing generally manage
large pools of money and trade in very large blocks like think big fat round [Stocks land around pool of money]
numbers in the millions of shares so when you inspect a tape running by
showing tons of tiny trades while odds are good that those are placed by you
know cardiologists and schoolteachers gardeners and plumbers all believing
that they can invest better than the market and the guys who make twenty five [People working in an office]
million dollars a year at goldman sachs yeah good luck with that and
statistically most retail investors who think they're smart enough to beat the
market are in fact idiots so the ethos of zagging in the opposite
direction of wherever retail investors are zigging well historically that's [Retail investor zig zagging]
generally been a really good idea they might be excellent cardiologists or
teachers or gardeners but when it comes to investing there well you know small
potatoes [Woman holding potato plant]
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A round lot is 100 shares of stock...or any form or subset of shares that is easily divisible by 100. If you can't easily divide by 100...you're, u...