means that the markets closed... Wait till they open again
The bid price is the price that someone is willing to pay for that stock, the ask price is what someone is willing to sell that stock for. If the stock is up to $1, for example, when you buy it the lowest someone is willing to sell it for could be $1.01, and someone else may be willing to buy it at $.99.
The bid is the price that the buyers are willing to pay. The ask is the price that the sellers are willing to pay.
The stock symbol ticket BID represents Sotheby's Common Stock. This is actually a great stock symbol for this company as their specialty is auctions that people "bid" on. As of the writing of this answer Sotheby's "BID" stock had last traded at the price of $35.08 per share.
The bid-ask spread is the difference between the bid price (the amount of money you get when you sell) and the ask price (the amount of money it costs to buy). Since the ask price is higher than the bid price, it costs you more money to buy the asset than you would receive should you be selling the same asset. This spread is the price (along with a commission) for making the trade.
buying price is bid, selling price is ask, difference is spread, profit is income or capital gain
The bid price is the price that someone is willing to pay for that stock, the ask price is what someone is willing to sell that stock for. If the stock is up to $1, for example, when you buy it the lowest someone is willing to sell it for could be $1.01, and someone else may be willing to buy it at $.99.
mema
All stock options are bought at the ask price. There is no such thing as buying at bid price unless you are a market maker bidding for options in the open market.
The buy and sell price of a stock are referred to as the "bid" and the "ask." The bid is the price that a buyer is willing to pay and the ask is the price that a seller is willing to accept. A narrow spread between the bid and the ask typically means that a stock has good liquidity due to a large volume of shares being traded on an orderly basis. A wide bid/ask spread may occur when shares have low trading volume or when a stock price is under pressure due to an imbalance of buy and sell orders. One method an investor has to prevent overpaying when a stock has a wide trading range is to enter a buy limit order which means the investor instructs his broker to consummate an order only at or below a specified price.
"Ask" is the price sellers are asking for their commodity. "Bid" is the price buyers are willing to pay.
Selling at a price equal to or lower than the bid price or buying at a price equal to or higher than the ask price.
The bid is the price that the buyers are willing to pay. The ask is the price that the sellers are willing to pay.
In a market the "Bid" is the price that someone is prepared to buy the stock/bond etc. for. So if the price is Bid 99 Ask 101 Someone is happy to pay 99 to buy the asset.
I want to sell my car - my asking price is $3,000 but your BID price is only $2,500
The stock symbol ticket BID represents Sotheby's Common Stock. This is actually a great stock symbol for this company as their specialty is auctions that people "bid" on. As of the writing of this answer Sotheby's "BID" stock had last traded at the price of $35.08 per share.
Bid is the highest price someone is offering to buy the securities for at a given point in time. Ask is the lowest price someone is offering to sell the securities for at a given point in time. When placing a trade you would typically be buying at the ask price and selling for the bid price.
The bid-ask spread is the difference between the bid price (the amount of money you get when you sell) and the ask price (the amount of money it costs to buy). Since the ask price is higher than the bid price, it costs you more money to buy the asset than you would receive should you be selling the same asset. This spread is the price (along with a commission) for making the trade.