If so, just have a friend put in
a bid at some low value, then you could just sell your stock on the exchange.
Not exact matches
As a result, in my line of thinking, I believe that is where new entrants to the ETF market may lay... For example, stock pickers like me balk
at the
bid / ask spreads (sometimes 10 % of the
value of the security) and
low volumes (some trading days, 0 shares change hands) of some perfectly good securities, such as the preferred shares of banks & insurance companies — as a perfect example.
ETFs tracks the index very closely, but a wide
bid - ask spread or deviations from fair
value might make ordering «
at market
value» a bit risky — you could end up buying / selling your shares
at a much higher /
lower price than you expect.
People list
low to get a
bidding war, the list
at the correct
value in hopes that is what a buyer is looking for and they list high because they likely need the money or hope that by adding a premium price buyers» will think it's a premium product.
Am I correct to assume when you refer to the not a wise pool, that those are properties with
low to no resale
value, those nobody will
bid on
at the tax deed sale and you end of with the property
at a loss?
«Agents know best how to prepare a home and maximize
value, agents provide broader exposure to the market and are more likely to generate multiple
bids, and the portion of sales that are between private parties are likely to be
at a
lower price than those on the open market.»