The Spread - Is it a cost?

Falken

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Hi guys, this is a noob question indeed.
Is the spread a cost you pay your broker in each trade?
Lets say a stock is trading at 91-92 and I'm going in for
a long trade at 92 (the bid) Does that mean I have to pay
the price between the ask and the bid? Thats also have spread betting brokers make money?

I'm planning to open up an account with IGindex soon and I would
really like to understand this:)

Creds to the one who can explain the spread to a newbie!

Many thanks.
 
The spread is wherre the SB companies make money

If you buy (at the offer) 92

it goes up 5p you've only made 4p

price is 96 -7 and you'll sell at the bid 96
 
I see, thanks foredog. Is the spread an actually cost that is drawn from your account or does the spread simply just make you earn less money? The spread isn't something we PAY, right?

Thanks again.
 
The spread is not a cost like a commission but you still pay it every time you trade aswhen you open a position you will buy at the offer and if you sold immediately at the bid you would lose the spread
 
Hi guys, this is a noob question indeed.
Is the spread a cost you pay your broker in each trade?
Lets say a stock is trading at 91-92 and I'm going in for
a long trade at 92 (the bid) Does that mean I have to pay
the price between the ask and the bid? Thats also have spread betting brokers make money?

I'm planning to open up an account with IGindex soon and I would
really like to understand this:)

Creds to the one who can explain the spread to a newbie!

Many thanks.

Well what do you falken think!?

Sorry, you probably get that a lot.

As foredog explained, the spread is the difference between the Bid price and the Ask price. The market price is defined as the Bid and Ask price combined, so if you were to buy@market and sell@market (and the market hasn't moved) then you have lost whatever the spread is + commission. In the real market (as opposed to spread betting) the spread isn't fixed. The spread for the ES in a very liquid market is 0.25 points, but sometimes it can be 0.50 and even 0.75 points sometimes more.
 
Theoretically, spread is not a cost,neither is slippage. But when considering your trading as a business, then yes, you'd better count it in as such.
 
In a way it is a cost. However who would buy and sell at the same instant?
It is possible that a millisecond after you deal the bid moves up to the old offer.
It is not worth worrying about unless it is avoidable. In the case of a 'penny' share the quote could be 1-2p
If you pay 2p you are effectively losing 50% of your money (on paper).
 
Ok Raysor. By the way, I'm planning to open an account with these guys: Impeo Markets - Home

Do they have a reasonable spread for daytrading US stocks? Their spreads seemed very tight when I traded with their Demo account. It says in their market information that their spread is calculated to a percentage, think it was 0,10%. What does this mean?

Reasonable or insanity?

Many thanks.
 
Ok Raysor. By the way, I'm planning to open an account with these guys: Impeo Markets - Home

Do they have a reasonable spread for daytrading US stocks? Their spreads seemed very tight when I traded with their Demo account. It says in their market information that their spread is calculated to a percentage, think it was 0,10%. What does this mean?

Reasonable or insanity?

Many thanks.
Sounds OK
I just checked one stock on IG looks like 0.2%
 
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