This process can take anywhere from a couple of hours to a couple of days, versus the minutes it takes to buy
very liquid stocks.
The thumb - rule is to choose
very liquid stocks, i.e. the stocks that have a high average daily volume so that they are bought and sold in high volumes without affecting the prices much.
I trade high - volume,
very liquid stocks and futures contracts that have tight bid - ask spreads to avoid slippage.
@rw: I just picked
a very liquid stock that will have narrow bid - ask spread so that the order will be filled right away.
Not exact matches
I have a
very small amount in P2P... I'm at around 6.3 % It's okay but I don't know how
liquid it is and it still is relatively new... I'd prefer investing in the
stock market.
How To Find Penny
Stocks Penny stocks are very risky and often not very liquid, there are not for me, but many people do like
Stocks Penny
stocks are very risky and often not very liquid, there are not for me, but many people do like
stocks are
very risky and often not
very liquid, there are not for me, but many people do like them.
Based on this formula,
stocks that return a value of 20 to 30 are
very explosive and are usually best for swing trading, especially when they are
liquid (easily tradeable for individual and professional investors alike).
You can buy shares of
stock in thousands of companies across the world, and this
stock can be sold quickly and easily for cash, making it a
very liquid asset.
If a
stock goes from $ 100 to $ 20 and then stays at $ 20 for a few years and then you offer to take it over at $ 30 - in a big,
liquid stock you'll have a
very real chance of getting overwhelming shareholder approval from an offer that wouldn't be entertained by a handful of owners of a privately held business.
What is bothering me is the following: As I said before, this area is
very competitive and Syngenta is a
liquid stock (50 - 100 mn CHF a day) and I do not have any special insights into the situation.As discussed before, I guess I have even an information disadvantage.
Steam until
very tender then mash with the
liquid of your choice —
stock, cream, or milk, dairy or non-dairy.
3/4 -1 # fresh tomatoes, peeled and chopped, retaining
liquid 7 large white mushrooms, cleaned well and sliced
very thinly (keep stems) 2 ounces (1/2 cup) fresh green beans (or sugar snaps) sliced thinly on the diagonal into 1 1/4 ″ lengths 2 T peanut oil 2T sherry 5 1/2 cups chicken
stock * 15 oz can creamed corn 4T cornstarch dissolved in 6T cold chicken
stock 1 large egg white (I misread this and used a whole egg; it was delicious) sugar and salt (yes, you might need them both) 2 oz good, sweet and smokey ham, coarsely minced
Place steamed cauliflower along with the sauteed onion and garlic in a high speed blender or food processor along with nutritional yeast,
stock powder,
liquids and some salt and pepper and proceed to blend until
very smooth and creamy.
A note on chicken
stock: Most
stock powders are
very high in salt and not much else so look for a ready to use
liquid variety with as little additives as possible, and preferably low salt as you can adjust this to your taste.
Braising is a simple cooking technique that involves browning meat in oil and then simmering it
very slowly in a small amount of
liquid — usually wine and
stock.
Sometime if the
stock is not
very liquid, i.e. it does not trade
very often and has low volume, the price may hit $ 10.00 and you may only have part of your order executed, say 500 out of your 1000 shares were bought.
In Thicken My Wallet's example of Canadian Dividend ETFs, the underlying securities — dividend paying Canadian
stocks — are
very liquid securities and the spread and bid / ask sizes reflect this.
A
very important tip to be successful in intraday trading is to trade in
liquid stocks.
Also like
stocks, ETFs are usually
very liquid - you can buy and sell ETF shares throughout the trading day.
e.g. on a universe of all
liquid stocks with pretty generous liquidity filters (price > $ 1, mcap > $ 100 million, on the market for at least 1 year, inflation - adjusted daily dollar volume in the last 63 days > $ 100,000), before friction, and hold for 5 days (no other sell rule), tested on all start dates Sept 2, 1997 forward to Aug 18, 2015 and then averaged CAGR, leaving an average of 3360
stocks in the universe to then test: a. 17.6 % cagr bottom 5 % of
stocks left by bad 4 day return (requiring price > ma200 was slightly worse than this at 17.4 %; but requiring price < ma5 was better at 18.1 %) b. 16.0 % cagr bottom 5 % of
stocks left by bad 5 day return c. 14.6 % cagr bottom 5 % by rsi (2) d. 14.7 % cagr for rsi (2) < 5 I have tested longer backtests on simpler liquidity filters (since my tests can't use all of the above filters on
very long tests) and this still holds true: bad return in the last 4 or 5 days beats low rsi (2) for 1 week holds.
Shares of publicly traded
stock are a
very liquid investment, and it is not difficult to turn shares into cash.
Even in a highly
liquid stock market with many transactions and
very informed participants, there are price anomalies that can be acted upon.
Is the finding in «Expected
Stock Market Volatility and the Size Effect» that the size effect concentrates in intervals after months of very high stock market volatility robustly evident from liquid exchange - traded funds (
Stock Market Volatility and the Size Effect» that the size effect concentrates in intervals after months of
very high
stock market volatility robustly evident from liquid exchange - traded funds (
stock market volatility robustly evident from
liquid exchange - traded funds (ETF)?
I give you professional management of a
stock portfolio with 30 - 40 different
stocks and cash, which is
very close to a clone of my own portfolio, in which 70 % + of my
liquid net worth is invested.
Stocks tend to be
very liquid, meaning that trades happen quickly.
On the other end of the spectrum, most listed securities traded at major exchanges, such as
stocks, funds, bonds and commodities are
very liquid, and can be sold instantaneously during regular market hours at fair market price.
Penny
stocks are not
very liquid and the company's weak market position and fragile financials make them risky investments, subject to total loss.
Stock Indexes are some
very liquid examples, so for the Standard & Poors you can open options contracts on the SPY ETF, as well as the S&P 500 futures, as well as many other S&P 500 products that only trade options and do not have the ability to be traded as the underlying shares.
In general with
stock ETFs that trade
very liquid markets this has historically not been much of an issue, as the creation / redemption mechanism on these types of assets is pretty robust: it's consequences on typical spread is much more important for the average retail investor.
The REITS trade like individual
stocks and are
very liquid investment vehicles.