Answer: The price of the stock you bought at 9: 20 is no longer the issue price of the stock. Under normal circumstances, the stock price will rise by tens to hundreds of% relative to the issue price on the day of listing and trading, and the specific increase is different for each stock. Of course, there are also cases where the stock price rose by only a few percent on the first day of listing or fell below the issue price.
When it comes to selling stocks, for example, if I decide to sell them now, should I entrust someone from a securities company to sell them? Will they sell at my price or let them decide for themselves? How soon will the money arrive after the sale, and will it be frozen for a period of time?
A: When you want to sell a stock, you just need to enter your stock trading account, enter the stock code, selling price and selling quantity of the stock you want to sell, and then confirm it to sell. Only when someone else buys the selling transaction in your stock at the price you want to sell now can you really make a deal, that is, your stock can be sold. After you sell stocks, the morality of buying stocks may come the day after you sell stocks.