What is After-Hours Trading

After-hours trading starts at 4 PM U.S. Eastern Time after the major U.S. stock exchanges close. The after-hours trading session can run as late as 8 PM, although volume typically thins out much earlier in the session. Trading in the after-hours is conducted through electronic communication networks (ECNs).

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What's After-Hours Trading?

Mechanics of After-Hours Trading

The Spark

After-hours trading is something traders or investors may use if news breaks after the close of the stock exchange. In some cases, the news, such as an earnings release, may prompt an investor to either buy or sell a stock.

Volume

The volume for a stock may spike on the initial release of the news but most of the time thins out as the session progresses. The amount of volume generally slows significantly by 6 PM. There is a substantial risk when trading in illiquid stocks after-hours. 

Price

Not only does volume sometimes come at a premium in the after-hours trading sessions but so does price. It is not unusual for the spreads to be wide in the after-hours. The spread is the difference between the bid and the ask prices. Due to fewer shares trading, the spread may be significantly wider than during the normal trading session. 

Participation

If liquidity and prices weren’t enough of a reason to make after-hours trading risky, the lack of participants makes it even riskier. In some cases, certain investors or institutions may choose simply not to participate in after-hours trading, regardless of the news or the event. This means that it is quite possible for a stock to fall sharply in the after-hours only to rise once the regular trading session resumes the next day at 9:30 AM, should many big institutional investors have a different view of the price action during the after-hours trading session.

Because volume is thin and spreads are wide in after-hours trading it is much easier to push prices higher or lower, requiring fewer shares to make a substantial impact.

Key Takeaways

  • After-hours trading starts at 4 PM and ends at around 8 PM.
  • Stock are not as liquid during after-hours trading.
  • The spread between the bid and the ask may be wider in after-hours trading.

Real World Example of After-Hours Trading

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) earnings results in February 2019 are an excellent example of how after-hours trading works and the dangers that come with it. Nvidia reported quarterly results on February 14. The stock was greeted by a big jump in price, rising to nearly $169 from $154.50 in the 10 minutes following the news. As the chart shows, volume was steady in the first 10 minutes and then dropped quickly after 4:30 PM. During the first 5 minutes of trading, around 700,000 shares traded and the stock jumped nearly 6%. However, volume slowed materially with just 350,000 shares trading between 4:25 and 4:30. By 5 PM, the amount of volume trading slowed to only 100,000 shares, while the stock was still trading around $165.

However, the next morning was a different story, which was when all the market participants had a chance to weigh in on Nvidia’s results. From 9:30-9:35 AM, nearly 2.3 million shares traded, more than three times greater than the volume in the initial minutes of the previous day's after-hours, and the price dropped from $164 to $161. The stock proceeded to trade lower throughout the rest of the day, closing at $157.20. That was just $3 higher than the previous day's close, after being up nearly $15 in the after-hours session. Nearly all of the after-hours gains had evaporated.