Trading stocks that have wide spreads

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by nwoptions, Jan 17, 2023.

  1. Hi everyone, I'm new to trading. I've been paper trading stocks for awhile now. I trade base breakouts using the CANSLIM methodology from Investor's Business Daily.

    I've noticed that most stocks that appear on IBD's "Stocks on the Move" list have extremely wide spreads between the bid and ask price. For instance, TKR is on Friday's list. Its bid is $49 and the ask is $79. That's a $30 spread. Would I be insane to trade such a stock?

    I learned that when trading options, I should trade options that have a tight spread of 5 cents per share.

    Do you trade stocks with wide spreads? Should I just avoid them all together?

    What would be an acceptable spread to you?

    Thanks
     
    Last edited: Jan 17, 2023
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  2. themickey

    themickey

    The wide spreads on stocks will be because they are not trading due to mkt closed.
     
  3. tomkat22

    tomkat22

    TKR looks fine to me.Only a .50 spread right now in pre-mkt. and a really small ATR for a $75 stock. Average volume is a little lite for my taste but otherwise looks fine.
     
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  4. The spread is one of the "costs" you have to overcome. The greater your obstacles, the less likely you are to succeed.

    If you have a LOT of confidence/high hopes in your fundamental play, perhaps you can overcome a large spread. If that's not your thinking, you should pass on the play.
     
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  5. GoldDigger

    GoldDigger

    Obviously, if you want to make a profit in a day trade,
    there needs to be a spread so that you can buy low
    and sell high.

    You need to look at whatever indicators matter to you,
    I usually look at historical data for prices, and do the
    math.

    If you are concerned about spending $49, then find a
    lower price stock. It doesn't matter how much it costs,
    just how much profit you can potentially earn.
     
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  6. lindq

    lindq

    You're right to carefully consider and calculate the costs of any spreads before you take off on a trading strategy.

    You'll need a solid system, and very good skills, to overcome the drag of spreads and fees.

    Traders often fail to include realistic spreads in their plans, then find out later that those costs put them in the hole, or at breakeven, after months or slugging away on even a good system.
     
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  7. tomkat22

    tomkat22

    $30 spread? Dude it's barely moved .30 cents all day and it's a $78 stock!
     
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  8. Gambit

    Gambit

    Everyone has a calendar. Not everyone uses one.
     
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  9. A tight one on any issue/trade.

    You're almost always going to "buy the ask" and "sell the bid". If the spread is wide, that's LOTS of slippage... and over time will become a difficult "cost" to overcome.
     
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  10. %%
    NO, but looks like you looked @ quote end of day\expired+ never accurate.
    More like noon time, bid $77.98 /ask= $78.05. [Av day volume=500k]
    Some of mine have a 1% spread; some dont;
    again that's[$30] an error for that bid\ ask
    Nice uptrend from 1974.
    Thanks for the question; IBD books are for cash stocks + related \ not options.
     
    #10     Jan 17, 2023
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