Definition
A LOC (Limit On Close) order is submitted before the closing auction deadline and will execute at the closing print only if the closing price is at or better than the specified limit. If the auction clears outside the limit, the LOC order does not participate and is cancelled with no partial fill. LOC orders are functionally similar to MLOCs on the TSX but the term is used across multiple North American marketplaces, including Cboe Canada. LOC orders are distinct from standard day-limit orders, which rest in the continuous order book throughout the session and may execute before the close. Institutional traders use LOC orders to achieve closing-price execution - for example, when a portfolio rebalance must be executed at NAV-setting prices - while retaining price protection. Under TSX and UMIR rules, dealers must ensure LOC orders are submitted within the exchange's published acceptance window, typically before 3:40 PM Eastern.
Source
TSX Trading Rules; Cboe Canada trading procedures; UMIR order-handling requirements
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 8.1