The broker then sells them at whatever the market will bear.
The first is where a broker sells to a customer off its own book.
The charge is paid to the financial broker selling the fund.
Or the broker might sell my client something entirely different from what I had suggested.
Brokers buy and sell securities for the account of customers.
But if they do none of these, then the broker can sell their securities to meet the margin call.
Brokers would then sell the shares to customers for the going price of about 6 cents a share.
After the customer order has been placed and the prices have changed, the broker could sell his position for a profit.
Days or years later, Picard might pick up that same phone and order the broker to sell.
A broker will set up a transaction under which you buy a "put" and sell a "call" on your stock.