Skip to content
~35 min read
~8-10 exam questions (6-8%)

In 1969, Wall Street nearly collapsed—not from a market crash, but from paperwork. Trading volume had exploded, and back offices couldn't keep up. Firms had to close on Wednesdays just to process the previous week's trades.

Today, most trades settle in one business day. But the rules governing how trades are documented, what practices are prohibited, and how transactions are reported remain central to the Series 7 exam.

Listen Along

Trading Rules and Settlement Mechanics

15 min

Prefer listening? This podcast-style episode covers the same material - perfect for commutes or multitasking. Browse all audio

Section 1: Order Tickets, Prohibited Practices, and Trade Reporting

Order Tickets

To place a customer order in the secondary market, a registered representative fills out an order ticket electronically. The order ticket must specify: buy or sell, security name (ticker), order size, duration (day or GTC), whether discretionary, execution price, solicited/unsolicited, manager approval, and the representative's name.

Regulation SHO

Short sales are subject to SEC Regulation SHO, which requires every sell order be marked as long or short. If short, the securities to be borrowed must be located by the broker before the sale.

Test Tip: Regulators are especially concerned that discretionary accounts might be excessively traded (churned). Making a profit does not absolve the violation.

Prohibited Trading Practices

Best Execution

When executing an order, a firm must obtain the best outcome for the customer, considering price, volatility, liquidity, size and type of transaction, number of markets checked, and accessibility to markets.

Customer Orders Have Priority

The firm cannot give preference to its own orders over customer orders—this is called trading ahead.

Front Running

When a firm receives a large block order, it cannot front-run by placing the firm's orders ahead of the block.

Market Manipulation Types
  • Pump and dump: Trading pools inflate price, then sell
  • Wash trades / Painting the tape: Fictitious trades to create appearance of activity
  • Marking the close/open: Trading to affect closing/opening prices
  • Spoofing: Placing large orders to mislead, then canceling

Trade Reporting

Trades in listed securities must be reported to the consolidated tape. OTC equity trades must be reported within 10 seconds; bond trades within 15 minutes.

System Securities Covered
TRACE Corporate bonds and other OTC debt
RTRS Municipal securities
EMMA Municipal market information access
ADF Alternative Display Facility for OTC listed securities
ORF OTC Reporting Facility for unlisted securities
Section 1 Key Points
Topic Key Details
Order tickets Required information, Reg SHO for short sales
Prohibited practices Front running, trading ahead, wash trades, spoofing
Trade reporting TRACE (bonds), RTRS/EMMA (munis), 10-15 sec/min deadlines

Section 2: Trade Clearing and Settlement

After a trade is executed, it must be cleared and settled. Clearing involves ensuring both parties agree on terms. Settlement is the exchange of cash for securities.

Key Players in Clearing

Entity Role
DTC Depository Trust Company - holds securities in book-entry form
NSCC National Securities Clearing Corporation - matches and clears trades
OCC Options Clearing Corporation - clears options trades
Clearing firm Handles settlement, custody, financing
Introducing firm Takes orders, relies on clearing firm for back office

Settlement Types

Settlement Timelines
Type Timeline
Regular way (T+1) Next business day - stocks, bonds, ETFs, options
Cash settlement Same day - trades before 2:30 PM ET
Seller's option Seller needs more time to deliver
When issued New securities not yet available

Good Delivery Requirements

Physical securities must be endorsed by the registered owner, with a signature guarantee (medallion). Stock certificates must be in round lots of 100 shares or multiples that add to 100.

Buy-Ins and Sell-Outs

If a seller fails to deliver by T+4, the buyer may execute a buy-in (forced purchase in open market). If a buyer fails to pay, the seller may execute a sell-out (forced sale) immediately after settlement date.

Customer Confirmations

Confirmations must include: customer/firm information, security name, size and price, trade and settlement dates, CUSIP number, and whether agency or principal transaction.

Accrued Interest

On bond trades, the buyer pays accrued interest to the seller for the period from the last payment to the day before settlement. Corporate and muni bonds use 30/360 calculation; Treasuries use actual/365.

Test Tip: Bonds trading flat (zero-coupon, defaulted, income bonds) have no accrued interest added.

Section 2 Key Points
Topic Key Details
Clearing entities DTC, NSCC, OCC, clearing vs. introducing firms
Settlement Regular way T+1, cash same-day
Good delivery Signature guarantee, round lots, DRS
Accrued interest 30/360 (corporate/muni), actual/365 (Treasury)

Section 3: Distribution Dates

Cash Dividend Dates

Key Dividend Dates
Date What Happens
Declaration date Board announces dividend
Record date Must own shares by this date to receive dividend
Ex-dividend date First day buyer won't receive dividend (same as record date with T+1)
Payment date Dividend is paid to shareholders of record

With T+1 settlement, the ex-date and record date are now the same day. To receive the dividend, you must buy the stock at least one business day before the record date.

Test Tip: Be careful with dividend questions. A dividend declared in December 2026 but paid in January 2027 counts as 2027 income for tax purposes.

Due Bills

Due bills are required when a trade takes place before the ex-date but settles after the record date. The seller must forward the dividend to the buyer.

Stock Splits and Stock Dividends

Forward splits increase shares outstanding and decrease price proportionally. Reverse splits decrease shares and increase price. Stock dividends work similarly. No taxable event occurs since no cash is received.

Unlike cash dividends, the ex-date for stock splits is the payable date + 1 business day.

Section 3 Key Points
Topic Key Details
Cash dividends Declaration, record, ex-date (same as record with T+1), payment
Due bills Required when trade settles after record date
Stock splits/dividends Ex-date is payable date + 1; no tax until sold

Chapter 8 Key Terms Glossary

Term Definition
Regulation SHO SEC rule for short sale marking and share location
Best execution Duty to get best outcome for customer
Front running Trading ahead of large customer orders
Wash trades Fictitious trades with no ownership change
Painting the tape Creating false trading activity
Spoofing Misleading orders that are quickly canceled
TRACE Reporting system for corporate bonds
RTRS/EMMA Reporting and access systems for munis
DTC Depository Trust Company
OCC Options Clearing Corporation
Regular way (T+1) Standard settlement next business day
Cash settlement Same-day settlement
Good delivery Securities meeting transfer requirements
Signature guarantee Medallion authentication for transfers
Buy-in Forced purchase when seller fails to deliver
Sell-out Forced sale when buyer fails to pay
Accrued interest Interest buyer pays seller on bond trades
Trading flat Bonds without accrued interest
Ex-dividend date First day buyer won't receive dividend
Due bill Obligation to forward dividend to buyer

Chapter 8 covers what happens after a trade is executed. Master trade processing and settlement before moving to Chapter 9: Fundamentals of Options, which introduces derivative securities.