Bid-Ask Spread

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

The difference between the highest price a buyer is willing to pay (bid) and the lowest price a seller is willing to accept (ask) for a security. Narrower spreads indicate higher liquidity and lower transaction costs, while wider spreads suggest lower liquidity and higher trading costs.

Example

A stock has a bid of $49.80 and an ask of $50.00, creating a bid-ask spread of $0.20 (or 0.40% of the price). An investor buying 100 shares with a market order pays $5,000 (100 × $50.00), while simultaneously selling would yield $4,980 (100 × $49.80), resulting in an immediate $20 transaction cost from crossing the spread.

Common Confusion

The ask price is always higher than the bid price. Investors buying shares pay the ask price (higher), while selling receives the bid price (lower). Market makers profit from the spread by buying at bid and selling at ask.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which price (bid or ask) an investor pays when buying or receives when selling
  • Calculating the dollar spread and percentage spread for a given security
  • Determining the transaction cost impact when crossing the spread
  • Recognizing that narrower spreads indicate higher liquidity and lower trading costs
  • Understanding that market makers profit from capturing the bid-ask spread
  • Comparing spreads between liquid (large-cap stocks) and illiquid (small-cap, bonds) securities

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Typical spread for highly liquid large-cap stocks $0.01-$0.05 (0.01%-0.10%) Narrow spreads indicate high liquidity and active trading
Typical spread for less liquid small-cap stocks $0.10-$0.50+ (0.5%-2%+) Wider spreads indicate lower liquidity and higher transaction costs
Typical spread for corporate bonds 0.25%-2%+ of price Bond markets generally less liquid than equity markets

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus is evaluating two investment options: Stock A (large-cap technology company) with a bid of $98.50 and ask of $98.52, and Stock B (small-cap biotech company) with a bid of $15.00 and ask of $15.40. He plans to invest $10,000 in one of these stocks and may need to liquidate within 6 months. From a transaction cost perspective, which consideration is most relevant?

Question 2

When an investor places a market order to buy shares of stock, which price will they pay?

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Question 3

A municipal bond is quoted with a bid of $98.75 and an ask of $99.50. An investor purchases $100,000 face value of these bonds and sells them one month later at the same quoted prices. What is the total transaction cost from crossing the bid-ask spread (ignoring commissions)?

Question 4

All of the following statements about bid-ask spreads are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser is comparing two ETFs for a client who trades frequently. ETF X (large-cap S&P 500 index) has an average bid-ask spread of 0.01%, while ETF Y (emerging markets small-cap) has an average spread of 0.50%. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. ETF X likely has higher daily trading volume than ETF Y
2. The wider spread for ETF Y compensates market makers for higher inventory risk
3. A client making 10 round-trip trades per year would pay more in spread costs with ETF Y
4. Both ETFs will have identical transaction costs since they are both exchange-traded

💡 Memory Aid

ASK is Always hiGHer: Sellers ASK for MORE money than buyers BID to pay. Remember: You Buy at the ASK (pay more) and Sell at the BID (receive less). Market makers profit from the spread by being in the middle.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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