|
|
|
|
|
by Dylan16807
1134 days ago
|
|
What in particular do you think I have backwards? If I have a medium size order, then even though they lower the spread they also front-run and limit how much I can buy at that price. So I'd rather have them not be there. If I have a tiny order, then I don't care what the spread is within reasonable bounds, and I still don't want them to be there. |
|
if you're an investor, otoh, the lower spread and greater liquidity means timely execution costs you less, not more. you aren't paying them for liquidity; they're paying you, or rather you're paying them, but much less than the spread you'd've paid an old-style open outcry market maker
(do you even remember markets before decimalization? minimum spread 12.5 cents)
of course you do need to execute intelligently; you can't just plop a million-dollar order in a hundred-million-a-day market and expect the market not to move against you