Sadly, I don't have the control over that. And it appears that my broker didn't route my order to the best bid available. Do you know if it's possible to find what was the book for a specific stock at a specific time and day on the Ritchie exchange?
Have they filed a form 1 with the SEC. Have they joined Finra. CFTC for futures. No exchange without these. Even an ECN needs to join Finra for access to the Trade Reporting Facility. Looking forward to seeing their filings.
@gate. Didn't accuse you of lying - just a massive amount of material omissions. Nothing other than a mistake in the limit works in your favor. You filled above the bid. ARCA got your broker's challenge and even went so far as to reach out for a voluntary bust. At your initial post i thought you were wronged. By your last post you lost me for all the omissions.
The Ritchie Exchange is closed for trading during the weekend but taking bets on the 143rd running of The Kentucky Derby..Retirement money is accepted.Go with a mudder, wet track today @ Churchill Downs.
Unfortunately, my time and sales is showing a best bid of $6.40 when you entered your order. So there was no better bid. Technically your broker gave you "price improvement" of $2.45 compared to that bid.
Well my broker told me that they called ARCA but honestly if my broker bought those shares I'm not sure they would tell me the truth. I got a phone call from them at about 9 am the next day. I think it's pretty quick to find the individual who bought those shares since they probably started their working day at 8. But it's possible. If I was the buyer, I wouldn't be easily reachable.
Without remembering the poster who posted time and sales, he didn't fill above the bid, he was the best offer. Looks like it was put in as a limit of 8.45 and several buyers/buyer poked st it in small chunks to eat it up. The few 99/101 buy lots would make me think it's some sort of automated buyer. Either he entered it st 8.45 or the software forgot a 1. One or the other