Bid and Ask Price Explained - 2022 Stock Market Tips

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Bid and Ask Price Chapters:
-Intro 0:00
-Definitions 0:23
-What is a Spread? 2:15
-Example Trade 5:45
-What is a limit order? 7:05

#stockmarket #swingtrading #stockmarkettips
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Just letting you know that this video is still very helpful even after 4 years! Very well explained!

DanteRich-nw
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THANK YOU SO MUCH. I was so overwhelmed with this bid and ask thing, but you explained it so well and so simply. You don't understand how much this video meant to me. THANK YOU!

arturjuszkiewicz
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I am finance major, teacher don't say all of this to us. you nailed it to the core. I am following you.excellent video.

arthurobame
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for long positions buy ask and sell bid for the best profit

gokhanpakalin
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PAy attention to market order. In bid and ask you see the limit orders only. But you can hit them and movin the price in two ways... with market order or just closing positions (long or short). So the price can move despite bid and ask are far and do not match. Bid and ask never match... are just market (like painting example you shown) and the real price movement is generated by market order or closing opened positions that will hit the bid or ask prices (that are limit orders).

andreazauli
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o I tried to understand the Bid and Ask last two months but now after watching your video i got this in 6 minutes. Great You nailed it to the My Mind.

technotony
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love your enthusiasm because it makes me focus more a what your talking about and makes it easier me to understand.

rickmelonman
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Best explanation i have ever seen ! Thank You so much!!! You helped a lot!

csinumusic
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This was a great refresher video. I will be watching more. I'm a tradesman and started trading 1995. My brokerage had enough assets 2012 to ride out a long catastrophic period. I began to rebuild my account and traded Devon and Pioneer in August and did okay for my timid 1st trades in years. The markets are falling since. Some months ahead, there will be great stocks at basement prices. MSFT is below its 52week low, for example.

keithhults
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Fantastic video! I'm so happy I found your channel. I'm very new to stock trading and you helped clear my confusion. Thank you so much. Definitely subscribed and will surely watch for more. Keep it up, Sir Markus!

Konanee
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Thank you! That was the best explanation I have seen.

lyndagordon
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U break this dwn so easy n simple, thank u sir

splinter
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Just the answer I wanted to find, and a suggestion for another video explaining of what I was asking next!

robbyvenetian
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best explanation ive seen yet. Love your videos!

dmoneymort
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great explanation and what is about sell the stock? which is the best way to execute order, limit order?

albertoperez
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I have a question for you... sometimes my bid is not the bid listed on a stock, as in I'm willing to pay more than the bid price, my order is in, but my bid is not the one listed... is it because my order is small? Your help is appreciated. Thanks!

trinashappyplace
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A+++ Excellent laymen’s terms Thank You ...ps. My trading buddy subscribed when I sent him the link

callalillies
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This is so helpful as I was going crazy! I was with Trade station and I have never had to think about the Bid and Ask price. Things seem to operate on the current price and really straightforward. I have recently moved trade zero and this additional bid and ask price process that I have to think about was driving me crazy but Your video has helped a lot. I will more than likely go back to tradestation but you have helped a lot. Am I right in thinking that Tradestation operates on the current price? If you know please share.

elainerhule
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Now the day GME went crazy, the spread was going crazy too, it was huge at some points of the day - can someone explain that, happening to a stock being traded in such planetary, thick volume as that one was that day? 🤷🏻‍♀️

JustMe-obnw
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Hi Markus, I have a question about prices moving up and down, not sure if you have a video on this or not. Obviously when there are more buyers trying to buy a stock, prices go up, and when there are more sellers, prices go down. The thing I get confused with though is that there is always a buyer or seller on either side of a transaction, so if everyone wants to buy, there still need to be people selling the stock, so how does the price go up? E.g. if someone wants to Buy Apple @ 105 then someone has to want to sell Apple at 105. If the demand is high and buyers are willing to pay say 110, then someone has to sell at 110. So I think I'm asking how do they not counteract each other?

Calsa