Meanwhile, brokers like Fidelity are increasing their market sell orders from 50% above market value, to 600%. They know what is about to happen. Apes with any semblance of wit about them would have transferred weeks ago.
I hold GME with Fidelity, and can presently setup a limit order for a single GME share.
1 GME share sells for $161.11 at the current market value. Earlier this year, the most I could place a limit order for with that share price would have been $322. I can now set the limit order value to $962, which is roughly 600% the current market value of GME.
Translation: The rocket is about to blast off, and Fidelity is well aware.
Meanwhile, brokers like Fidelity are increasing their market sell orders from 50% above market value, to 600%. They know what is about to happen. Apes with any semblance of wit about them would have transferred weeks ago.
"brokers like Fidelity are increasing their market sell orders from 50% above market value, to 600%" -- Says who, mysterious stranger on the internet?
I am telling you.
I hold GME with Fidelity, and can presently setup a limit order for a single GME share.
1 GME share sells for $161.11 at the current market value. Earlier this year, the most I could place a limit order for with that share price would have been $322. I can now set the limit order value to $962, which is roughly 600% the current market value of GME.
Translation: The rocket is about to blast off, and Fidelity is well aware.
I can set a limit-order price to anything I want.
Fidelity sucks.
It seems you already knew the answer to your own question, which begs the question; what is your point?
Says me- the gal who just placed an order for 600% the current price for gme (1 share)
Buying (snicker) or selling?
Why not set your limit-sale price at $10 million/sh?
Oh.... You're using a lame trading platform that herds its users into parameters the market-maker algos can handle.