FAP Turbo

Make Over 90% Winning Trades Now!

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Understand Inside Spreads - How to Invest

By Sara Ferguson

One of the first steps in understanding trading is to indentify the players. What day traders really focus on are the activities of market makers. A market maker represents an institution (such as Prudential Securities, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch & Co

The downside of being a market maker is that you're obligated to purchase stocks when no one wants them. The upside of being a market maker is that you get to pocket the profits of a spread. A spread is the difference between a bid and ask price. For example, a stock with a bid and ask price of 15 151⁄4 has a spread of 1⁄4. The bid price is $15, and the sell price is $15.25. By selling 1,000 shares at $15.25, the market maker profits by $250.

Spreads are often just a few cents for each stock. However, these pennies quickly become dollars because of high trading volume. Last year, NASDAQ market makers earned $2 billion from spreads. Day traders have sliced into some of these profits. Recent reports indicate that market maker spreads are down by 35 percent.

The existence of several kinds of spreads has caused some confusion. The following list defines some of these spreads:

Actual spreads paid: The narrowest measure of a spread, because it's based on actual trade prices. The actual spread paid is calculated by measuring actual.

Actual spreads paid: The narrowest measure of a spread, because it's based on actual trade prices. The actual spread paid is calculated by measuring actual

Inside spread: The highest bid and lowest offer being quoted among all the market makers competing in a stock. Because the quote is a combined quote, it's narrower than an individual dealer quote. - 23204

About the Author:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home