Electronic Trading means placing and matching buy-sell orders through digital trading systems rather than a physical open-outcry floor. For Indian readers, the concept is most useful when it is connected to SEBI, RBI, NSE, BSE, MCX, NSDL/CDSL, Demat accounts, PAN-based KYC, rupee costs, Indian taxation, and real investor protection.
How traders use it
In India, trading runs through regulated brokers and exchange systems. Orders are routed to venues such as NSE, BSE, or MCX, margins are monitored, and settlement happens through clearing and depository infrastructure.
A trader placing an NSE order should know the entry price, stop-loss, target, quantity, maximum loss, brokerage impact, and tax impact before the order goes live.
Costs and controls
- Check brokerage, GST, STT or CTT, exchange charges, stamp duty, spread, and slippage.
- Use position sizing instead of relying only on confidence.
- Know whether the product is delivery, intraday, futures, options, currency, or commodity.
- Keep records because taxation differs across delivery equity, intraday equity, derivatives, and commodities.
Main risks
Fast execution does not mean good execution. A liquid stock can still gap, a stop-loss can fill at a worse level, and leverage can turn a small price move into a large capital loss. Trade only with money and risk limits you can afford.
This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser, tax professional, or qualified expert for advice suited to your situation.