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Strategies & Market Trends : Successful Short-Term Trading Strategies for Beginners

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To: Mike McFarland who wrote (14)8/10/1998 9:10:00 PM
From: William W. Dwyer, Jr.   of 78
 
Mike,

If you're trading this position and holding for more than a few days, I don't see where the spread really matters a lot, assuming it's reasonable, maybe on the order of 1/4 point or so. In my experience, stocks with spreads that change a lot, or spreads that exceed maybe 3/8 point, these stocks probably have low daily volume (and, therefore, possible liquidity problems) and you might not want to trade them for that reason, because you may not be able to get out fast enough when you're ready to sell your position.

For example, one of the first stocks I traded early last year was CAML, cheap penny stock that I shouldn't have been trading anyway. I had 30,000 shares and when I was ready to sell, well, it took me about a week to get all the shares sold at a reasonable price. Not good.

So I would suggest looking out for stocks with spreads exceeding 1/4 point (plenty have only 1/16 or so) or stocks with low average daily volume (perhaps 250,000 shares daily minimum, or whatever you are comfortable with).

Remember, unless you're lucky, you probably pay the spread twice, on entry and again on exiting the position. So, if it's a short-term position, your profits need to cover both spreads and both commissions, maybe even taxes and other expenses.

To answer your question more directly, though, the stock you're talking about may be tradable for one reason or the other (e.g., if it's going UP), but there may be plenty of stocks with better spreads. I think the spread is more of a consideration for intra-day positions, daytrading).

Bill
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