You usually trade indexes or Bitcoin and their volatility isn't high.
Not exact matches
Emerging - market
indexes usually trade between 1.5 and 2.4 times book value; the overall MSCI is
trading at about 1.7 times right now.
Our favorite strateges will be shorting or defensive Market Neutral Hedging: Buying a strong stock while shorting an appropriate
index (SPX or Nasdaq), or Pairs
Trading - buying a strong company and selling a weak one in the same sector
usually makes money whether the market moves up, down or sideways.
Similar losses were recorded by the S&P 500
Index and the Nasdaq, while the «fear index» (the CBOE Volatility Index) spiked over 18 (five points above where it usually tra
Index and the Nasdaq, while the «fear
index» (the CBOE Volatility Index) spiked over 18 (five points above where it usually tra
index» (the CBOE Volatility
Index) spiked over 18 (five points above where it usually tra
Index) spiked over 18 (five points above where it
usually trades).
The
trade - off is that the interest rate on an ARM can change periodically,
usually in relation to an
index, and the monthly payment will go up or down accordingly.
Well, some stock traders will probably tell you it
usually means relatively tame
trading the day before the report, maybe some pre-market fireworks in stock
index futures right after the numbers are released at 8:30 a.m. ET, and more volatile
trading the remainder of the day as the market attempts to gauge the report's supposed bullishness or bearishness.
It dishes out a variety of low - fee diversified portfolios of broad - market
index funds (and exchange -
traded funds) that can be held for a long time —
usually 10 years or more.
Would it be fair to assume this: High market - cap securities will
usually perform influenced to some extent by the market /
Index fund they are currently
traded on.
On the other hand, I
usually don't play the cash
indices (SPX, OEX, COMP, NDX, RUT) for two reasons: the strike prices are far apart,
usually $ 5; and the bid / ask spread is very high — as I will explain later.nnThe day that you placed this
trade was the most volatile since July of 2010.
The return of an
index exchange -
traded fund (ETF) is
usually different from that of the
index it tracks, because of fees, expenses, and tracking error.
ETFs are
traded on an exchange just like a stock and
usually track an
index; however, they're also structured somewhat differently.
Equal - weighted
index funds tend to have higher stock turnover than market - cap weighted
index funds, and as a result, they
usually have higher
trading costs.
We view this as a suitable level of transparency, particularly since most investors in actively managed ETFs are
usually seeking longer - term holding periods than
index strategies, which can be (and often are) used for
trading purposes.
My bedside table
usually holds a well - thumbed book on exchange -
traded funds, and I routinely bore people with meditations about the merits of cap - weighted
indexes.
I don't
usually pay a significant amount of attention to where the market
indices are
trading at or what the valuation of the overall market is.
Exchange
traded fund (ETF) are
traded on the recognized stocks exchanges and
usually it is the mutual funds schemes or
Index or other asset class (like for example Gold)...
The biggest and oldest ETF (SPY: S&P 500, which tracks the Standard & Poor's 500
index),
usually has a bid - ask spread of around a penny on shares that
trade for ~ $ 125.
We do buy some closed - end funds and ETFs that
trade on exchanges like individual stocks do, but unlike individual stocks, both ETFs and closed - end funds are made up of many underlying securities and
usually track an
index (like the S&P 500 or the NASDAQ - 100).
The obvious disadvantage of ETFs is that you
usually pay a commission to buy and sell them, whereas
index mutual funds and most robo - advisors don't have
trading costs.
The
trade - off is that the interest rate can change periodically,
usually in relation to an
index, and the monthly payment will go up or down accordingly.