CastAStone
Business nerd. Good at math. Bad at spelling.
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2019
- Messages
- 5,924
I think of it like an order book at a stock broker.I always wonder if the owners are still actively using contracts like those but are open to a sale at a ridiculous price.
I can tell them, I would like to buy apple stock at $150, they will take my order, and see if they can find someone to take the other end of my trade, they will execute it.
Since Apple stock is ~$225 today, it probably won’t happen. But on the off chance that they make their way through the “book” until every single person who put in an order with a higher price than mine gets their shares, and they get to me, I’ll get some cheap Apple stock.
In the stock market, this usually only happens anymore when a company is in free fall for bad reasons, or an electronic trading Desk has royally screwed up.
But in DVC, I’ve seen it happen four times in four years, first with AKV, then VGF, then VGC, and just a few months ago with Poly. Inventory got tight enough that it cleared the order book. And all the sudden everyone was like “oh I guess the price for Poly is $180 now” when it was $135 two weeks earlier.