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Playlist Finance: Trading 11 videos

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Finance: What is Spread?
48 Views

What is spread (bid-ask)? The bid-ask spread compares how much a buyer will pay to how much the seller will sell for. The asking price is what the...

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Finance: What is Spread? 48 Views


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Description:

What is spread (bid-ask)? The bid-ask spread compares how much a buyer will pay to how much the seller will sell for. The asking price is what the seller wants, while the bid is how much the buyer offers; the spread looks at how much higher the ask is than the bid.

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Transcript

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what is spread? before we start just no. get your mind

00:08

out of the gutter. spread refers to the money value between [100 dollar bill]

00:11

a bid and ask price under a market maker structure of trading securities. no more

00:21

wire hangers, a plastic hanger company is publicly traded on an exchange like

00:27

Nasdaq where buyers bid for a price to purchase and sellers ask for a price to [Nasdaq wall shown]

00:34

trade. no more wire hangers is bid this moment at 37:23 a share by buyers

00:39

willing to buy right now at that price and is being asked at this moment at a

00:45

price of 37.31. note the eight cents a shared difference in the share prices.

00:50

that dif is the spread between the two prices, and it's worth noting that in [bread is buttered]

00:55

extremely volatile stocks, the spread widens. and in boring highly liquid

01:01

stocks which don't move much, the spread tightens or is narrower. that is on a

01:07

volatile equivalent of no more wire hangers the spread might grow to 20 or

01:11

30 cents a share whereas a boring name that pays a big dividend and the stock

01:16

never moves much we're thinking AT&T here, [man snores at a desk]

01:19

well that spread might be just three or four cents. so why grow? well because a

01:23

market maker in a volatile stock doesn't want to be caught losing money on her

01:28

inventory. if no more wire hangers suddenly gapped down to 37.10 a share [equation shown]

01:33

well it would be likely less than the average of what the market maker paid

01:38

for her quote "inventory" unquote in that stock from which he was making a market

01:42

in it. each time the shares trade the market makers dip into that spread to [woman dips cracker in butter]

01:47

pay their bills and allow them to keep doing business. so that's spread. and it's

01:51

not the type that Prince used to sing about. [man on stage]

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