It sounds like something contestants shout during Wheel of Fortune ("Big Money! Atta Money! At-the-Money!") or maybe a kind of specialized racetrack bet ("I'd like the number four horse in the second rate at the money"). But "at the money" actually means that a stock's price matches the strike price of the stock options that an investor has bought.
So if you have the right to buy a share at $50 and then the share actually is at $50 when you go to buy, the share is at the money. Example: Joe Shmoe has paid 3 bucks for the right to buy a share of KO (Coke) for $80. That option expires in a week and the stock is at $76 a share today. If the stock climbs to $80 a share (the bid), then it is said to be "at-the-money" or at the strike price. If it climbs above $80, then it's "in the money"; below $80, it's "out of the money" honey.
Note that KO could be $82.50 and the call option buyer has still lost money on the trade (she paid $3 for the call and KO ended up only $2.50 in the money so she lost half a buck).
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Finance: What are Limit Order, Sell Limi...7 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is a limit order? you want to sell a thousand shares
of Colonel electric it was demoted after they cut their dividend the shares have [Scissors cuts dividend in half]
been trading wildly between $15 and $25 a share you don't want to feel like a
moron for having sold them at fifteen bucks when six weeks later they kissed
25 with tongue so what do you do well you put in a limit order that is you put
a limit of a minimum price of 25 bucks a share for Colonel Electric such that [Pile of stocks appear]
those shares will simply sit in your account unsold maybe forever until
somebody out in the wild blue yonder of Stockland is willing to pay twenty five [Woman standing at a colonel electric stand]
dollars or more for the shares where you have a minimum price limit of 25 bucks a
share in your order so here's to hoping they sell and don't get further demoted [Man carries stock into car]
Sargent Electric is just a place you don't want to go
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