T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
728.1 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | You'll never get out of this maze! | Thu Jun 02 1994 13:12 | 19 |
| re <<< Note 728.0 by MILKWY::JSIEGEL >>>
-< What exactly does "offered at" mean? >-
>
> Does anyone know exactly what "Bid" and "offered at" means when
> checking an option quote? I thought I knew...that bid is what someone
> has offered to buy the option at, and "offered at" is what someone
> looking to sell the option is asking for the option. Therefore I
> assumed that if a current quote was
>
> Bid: 1 1/8
> Offered at: 1 3/8
bid is the price someone has put to the market for the option, ie, what they
are willing to pay for the security.
the offered at price is the price somene is willing to sell the option for.
the difference is the spread.
|
728.2 | Thanks, but that doesn't unconfuse me... | MILKWY::JSIEGEL | | Thu Jun 02 1994 13:17 | 7 |
| re .1
That is what I thought, and tried to explain in my base note. But
doesn't that mean that the "offered at" price should have changed to
the 1 1/4 that I was offering to sell at?
Jon
|
728.3 | | WEEKS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Thu Jun 02 1994 14:34 | 12 |
| I've seen this happen with Fido, too.
If you're trading less than 10 contracts, I don't think they'll post
your price because options exchanges guarantee a 10-lot can be traded
at the bid and ask (barring extraordinary circumstances).
If your option trades on the CBOE you can ask them to "book" your
order, which the CBOE guarantees will trade before any floor traders
trying to execute similar orders. This costs your broker some money,
though, so they may push back. I don't think they HAVE to book orders.
John
|
728.4 | | MRKTNG::BROCK | Son of a Beech | Fri Jun 10 1994 10:32 | 7 |
| On stocks (and options and etc) traders make their money two ways. One
is commission on the sale - this goes to the broker. The trader makes
his(her) money by buying at the bid and selling at the offer. So if a
stock has a bid of 1.5 and an offer of 2.0, you the holder of the
stock will sell to the trader for 1.5 and the trader will sell it to
the next buyer at 2.0 (spread increased in this example to make a
point).
|