brucemole
Member
- Messages
- 67
- Likes
- 0
@Bruce...
I never saw SS when it was oringally full tick.What I have noticed is how much better the market is now that it is Full-tick. Previously nothing in the spreads would trade. there would be 3000 thousand contracts on a bid...be hit by 100 and they would all disappear. Now you have a situation like athe other day when someone sold 5000 9's in z9h10 and there were still 1000 on the bid after...this happens all the time and its great to see.
I have a sneaking suspision that SS is alright for us small locals but as soon as you try to do 250+ contracts you get screwed because the market is run by a select few banks/houses and they all know whats going on. Because of this the market gets massively skewed whenever one of them is putting on a play in a spread. For example m9/u9 going from 6s to pars when the contract was rolled over. its why spreads go too far out of whack.
Any way thats my 2 cents. At the end of the day tho the market is much much better with full ticks...altho there aint much free money
In theory it should be better full tick for us. You can lean on paper orders in the fly book, calendars, skippers etc and if you can leg up a tick better than the paper order - @ £12.50 rather than £6.25 - well it can only be good. That's as close as it gets to free money as it gets I reckon. It just wasn't worth taking the minimum price movement out when it was half tick unless you were trading for free.
I'm gald the full tick is back bigdog but the markets have been sh1t recently, across the board nearly (fx excepted perhaps and bonds). My mate is day trading the FTSE and he says volume is rubbish. Just hope that some risk comes back onto the table sooner rather than later.
At the moment there are only a couple of opportunities a day to get anything decent on. If you miss them then it's a waste of a day. Yesterday I made all my ticks on a fill at 17:40. Was half tempted to go home early as it was so quiet. Patience is the key I guess. And a stacked order book. But we all know the risks associated with that