Bracket Overview
Brackets help you integrate a risk management strategy directly into 
 the creation of an equity or option order. Bracket orders are conditional 
 orders you can attach to your stock or option orders that enable you to 
 pre-define profit and loss targets where, if those targets are reached, 
 the software will automatically send a market order to exit the position. 
 
Bracketed orders consist of a primary order and up to three contingent 
 orders, which if triggered, will close out the position opened by the 
 primary order. Brackets can provide automated risk management for your 
 open positions regardless of whether you are logged on to the software.
On the Trade tab, click Add 
 Bracket, or if the Bracket panel is already open, check the exit 
 type you wish to add to the order you are creating.

Stock symbols and price and volume data shown here 
 and in the software are for illustrative purposes only. Charles Schwab 
 & Co., its parent or affiliates, and/or its employees and/or directors 
 may have positions in securities referenced herein, and may, as principal 
 or agent, buy from or sell to clients.
TIP:  Brackets 
 can also be added to orders initially opened without brackets. See Managing Bracket Orders for instructions.
 
Certain aspects of the bracket orders are predefined: 
- The quantity of the bracket 
 order(s) will always be equal to the quantity filled in the primary order. 
 
- Brackets remain active 
 with their primary order or primary position (when the primary order fills) 
 indefinitely, unless they are manually removed or are triggered and filled.
- Bracket orders can be 
 set up for any equity or option order that opens or adds to an existing 
 position, regardless of the venue of the primary order.
- Brackets on symbols with wide spreads may not fire if the spread is too wide.
- Bracket orders are only 
 active during the standard session (9:30 a.m. ET to 4:00 p.m. ET)
- Bracket orders are always 
 sent as a SmartEx Market order 
 regardless of the primary order's routing venue. 
- Bracket orders trigger 
 off the bid/ask price for both stocks and options.
- While the Est. 
 Price is calculated off the Limit or Inside bid/ask price (for 
 market orders), the actual exit trigger price will be based on the average 
 fill price from the primary order. See the Bracket 
 Order Examples topic to get a better understanding of brackets in 
 action.
- Note: 
  Order quantities 
 on brackets will not adjust due to corporate actions, including 
 but limited to stock splits, stock dividends, spin-offs, mergers, and 
 name changes. 
- Brackets placed on stocks 
 that do not have bid/ask quotes, including Pink Sheet securities, will 
 not activate.
- When placing a bracket 
 order to sell and close out a long position, 
 if the tradable quantity of your position is less than the quantity you 
 specify in the order, the software will send the order for the lesser 
 amount rather than rejecting the order due to insufficient shares available 
 to trade.
You may establish up to three types of exits:
- Profit 
 Exit: Specifies the increase (or decrease for short sale orders) 
 in value from the average fill price required to trigger the profit exit. 
 The value can be a certain number of points (pts) or a percentage change 
 from the execution price, or the exit price itself. 
 
 For example, if you bought a stock at $10 and wanted to exit the position 
 at $12, you could enter 2 pts, 20%, or $12. The Est. 
 Price label will show you what the likely result might be if the 
 Profit Exit is triggered, but that price will be adjusted if the average 
 fill price on your order is different.
- Trailing 
 Stop Exit: Specifies the amount you are willing to let a stock 
 or option price go against whatever gains it may attain before closing 
 it at the market price. The value can be a certain number of points or 
 a percentage of the execution price.
 
 If you use a trailing stop exit in conjunction with a profit and/or 
 loss exit, the trailing stop will operate between these two exits. If 
 either of the profit or stop loss exit prices are met, the bracket will 
 trigger regardless of any trailing stop you may have set.
 
 For example, if you bought a stock at $10 and wanted to sell should 
 the market move against you 5% (or .5 points per share) from the execution 
 price, the trailing stop would place an order to close your position only 
 if the stock price loses 5% from its highest gain. The lowest price that 
 would trigger a market order to sell would be $9.50 because it never gained 
 on the execution price. It is important to remember that a percentage 
 on this exit is based on the original fill price, rather than on the current 
 market price.
 
 As another example, the price might move up without ever dropping .5 
 points.  It 
 then hits  $14, 
 retreats to $13.5 and the order is triggered. If you had also set up a 
 profit exit of 10% and a loss exit of 3% in conjunction with your trailing 
 stop exit, the bracket would trigger at either 3% below the execution 
 price or 10% above that price if met. This would occur regardless of your 
 trailing stop calculation.
- Stop 
 Loss Exit: Specifies the decrease in value (or increase for short 
 orders) from the average fill price required to trigger the stop loss 
 exit. The value can be a certain number of points (pts) or a percentage 
 change from the execution price, or the stop loss price itself. 
 
 For example, if you bought a stock at $10 and wanted to close the position 
 after it had lost 10%, you could enter 1 pt, 10%, or $9. The 
 Est. Price label will show you what the likely result might be 
 if the Stop Loss Exit is triggered.
 
 
More on Managing Bracket Orders
Copyright ©Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. 
 2011. All rights reserved. Member SIPC. 
 (0411-2707)