Market performance is determined using the bid /
ask midpoint at 4:00 pm Eastern time, when the NAV is typically calculated.
Using daily contract closing bid -
ask midpoints for 26 equity futures, 14 interest rate swaps, 31 currency exchange rates and 16 commodity futures during January 1990 through April 2015, they find that: Keep Reading
Not exact matches
Market price returns are based on the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 pm Eastern Time (when NAV is normally determined), and do not represent the return you would receive if you traded at other times.
Market price returns reflect the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread as of the close of trading on the exchange where Fund shares are listed.
[132] An alternative approach is to use the wisdom of the crowd and base a prediction on betting activity: the Sporting Index column below covers bets on the number of seats each party will win with the
midpoint between
asking and selling price, while FirstPastThePost.net aggregates the betting predictions in each individual constituency.
If you use another (such as the Bank of Canada or OANDA) you're sure to get slightly different numbers: there are noon rates, closing rates, bid prices,
ask prices and
midpoints, all of which makes this more complicated than it might seem.
Market returns are based upon the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 p.m. eastern time (when NAV is normally determined for most ETFs), and do not represent the returns you would receive if you traded shares at other times.
For example, if the option you want to sell is bid at $ 1.00 and
ask at $ 1.20, you'll want to use a limit order for $ 1.10 — at the
midpoint between bid and
ask — wait a few minutes and it will probably get filled.
Market returns are based upon the
midpoint or the last bid /
ask spread at 4:00 pm Eastern time.
Market price returns are calculated using the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 pm Eastern time (or the last
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread prior to 4:00 pm Eastern time) from the beginning of the relevant period to the end of the relevant period.
Market price returns are based upon the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 p.m. ET (when NAV is normally determined for most funds) and do not represent the returns you would receive if you traded shares at other times.
Market returns are based upon the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 pm eastern time, and do not represent the returns an investor would receive if shares were traded at other times.
Market returns are based upon the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time (when NAV is normally determined for most ETFs), and do not represent the returns you would receive if you traded shares at other times.
It is possible to peg an order to a price somewhere between the bid and
ask, eg the
midpoint, and this order will be resting in the order book but won't show up in the market data.
Lets say the bid is 49.98 and the
ask is 50.01, the
midpoint is 50.
I have often read that the fair value of a stock is the
midpoint of the bid and the
ask price.
The
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread may be a better indicator of fair value than the INAV.
Market price returns are based on the
midpoint of the bid /
ask spread at 4:00 pm Eastern Time (when NAV is normally determined), and do not represent the return you would receive if you traded at other times.
If agreement is not reached on one or more issues, the program would recalculate the
midpoint compromise on those issues and
ask whether the result is acceptable to each party.
The program would state the
midpoint result on each issue to each party, without describing the result as a
midpoint, and
ask whether the result is acceptable to each party.
A trader will add to their quoted volume in each snapshot by taking the minimum of their quoted bids and quoted
asks within 0.25 % either side of the
midpoint.
But the reality is, this is what happens when you
ask coders to rate photographs: they tend to be really harsh, and about 80 - 90 % of the judgments fall below the
midpoint of the scale.