Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The “bid” is the price at which you can SELL the base
currency.
The “ask” is the price at which you can BUY the base
currency.
This spread is the fee for providing transaction immediacy. This is why
the terms “transaction cost” and “bidask spread” are used
interchangeably.
Best MT4 Broker
TRADE NOW
with lowest cost
Instead of charging a separate fee for making a trade, the cost is built into
the buy and sell price of the currency pair you want to trade.
They make money by selling the currency to you for more than they
paid to buy it.
And they also make money by buying the currency from you for less
than they will receive when they sell it.
This difference is called the spread.
It’s just like if you were trying to sell your old iPhone to a store that buys
used iPhones. (A smartphone with only two rear cameras? Yuck!)
In order to make a profit, it will need to buy your iPhone at a price lower
than the price it’ll sell it for.
If it can sell the iPhone for $500, then if it wants to make any money, the
most it can buy from you is $499.
The spread is usually measured in pips, which is the smallest unit of the
price movement of a currency pair.
The type of spreads that you’ll see on a trading platform depends on the
forex broker and how they make money.
Fixed spreads stay the same regardless of what market conditions are at
any given time. In other words, whether the market is volatile like Kanye’s
moods or quiet as a mouse, the spread is not affected. It stays the same.
Advertisement
Fixed spreads are offered by brokers that operate as a market maker or
“dealing desk” model.
Using a dealing desk, the broker buys large positions from their liquidity
provider(s) and offers these positions in smaller sizes to traders.
This means that the broker acts as the counterparty to their clients’ trades.
Having a dealing desk, allows the forex broker to offer fixed spreads
because they are able to control the prices they display to their clients.
Trading with fixed spreads also makes calculating transaction costs more
predictable.
Since spreads never change, you’re always sure of what you can expect to
pay when you open a trade.
Advertisement
There will be times when the forex market is volatile and prices are rapidly
changing. Since spreads are fixed, the broker won’t be able to widen the
spread to adjust for current market conditions.
So if you try to enter a trade at a specific price, the broker will “block” the
trade and ask you to accept a new price. You will be “requoted” with a new
price.
The requote message will appear on your trading platform letting you know
that price has moved and asks you whether or not you are willing to accept
that price. It’s almost always a price that is worse than the one you ordered.
Slippage is another problem. When prices are moving fast, the broker is
unable to consistently maintain a fixed spread and the price that you finally
end up after entering a trade will be totally different than the intended entry
price.
Slippage is similar to when you swipe right on Tinder and agree to meet up
with that hot gal or guy for coffee and realize the actual person in front of
you looks nothing like the photo.
What are Variable Spreads in Forex?
Advertisement
This means they have no control over the spreads. And spreads will widen
or tighten based on the supply and demand of currencies and the overall
market volatility.
Oh, and spreads may also widen when Trump randomly tweets about the
U.S. dollar when he was still the President.
What are the Advantages of Trading With
Variable Spreads?
(But just because you won’t get requoted doesn’t mean you won’t
experience slippage.)
Trading forex with variable spreads also provides more transparent pricing,
especially when you consider that having access to prices from multiple
liquidity providers usually means better pricing due to competition.
Variable spreads aren’t ideal for scalpers. The widened spreads can quickly
eat into any profits that the scalper makes.
Variable spreads are just as bad for news traders. Spread may widen so
much that what looks like a profitable can turn into an unprofitable within a
blink of an eye.
The question of which is a better option between fixed and variable spreads
depends on the need of the trader.
Advertisement
There are traders who may find fixed spreads better than using variable
spread brokers. The reverse may also be true for other traders.
Generally speaking, traders with smaller accounts and who trade less
frequently will benefit from fixed spread pricing.
And traders with larger accounts who trade frequently during peak market
hours (when spreads are the tightest) will benefit from variable spreads.
Traders who want fast trade execution and need to avoid requotes will want
to trade with variable spreads.
It’s pretty easy to calculate and all you need are two things:
This means if you were to buy EURUSD and then immediately close it, it
would result in a loss of 1.4 pips.
To figure out the total cost, you would multiply the cost per pip by the
number of lots you’re trading.
So if you’re trading mini lots (10,000 units), the value per pip is $1, so your
transaction cost would be $1.40 to open this trade.
The pip cost is linear. This means that you will need to multiply the cost
per pip by the number of lots you are trading.
If you increase your position size, your transaction cost, which is reflected
in the spread, will rise as well.
For example, if the spread is 1.4 pips and you’re trading 5 mini lots, then
your transaction cost is $7.00.
Upgrade to Babypips Premium! Unlock exclusive content that will help prepare you for the
upcoming trading week. Subscribe today and save 20% with an annual subscription!
Next Lesson
Impress Your Date with Forex Lingo
Give me a stock clerk with a goal and I'll give you a man who will make history. Give me a man with no goals and I'll
give you a stock clerk.J.C. Penny
Learn Forex
Forex Tools
MarketMilk™
Economic Calendar
RiskOn / RiskOff Meter
Position Size Calculator
"Back to Breakeven" Calculator
Pip Value Calculator
Pivot Point Calculator
Company
About
Contact
Advertise
Newsletter
Testimonials
FAQ
Subscribe
Babypips
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Babypips helps new traders learn about the forex and crypto markets without falling asleep.
We introduce people to the world of trading currencies, both fiat and crypto, through our nondrowsy educational content and tools.
We're also a community of traders that support each other on our daily trading journey.
Privacy Policy
Risk Disclosure
Terms of Use
Privacy Manager