Examples of bid price in the following topics:
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- All those who want to buy say the maximum price they're willing to pay for a certain number of shares (the bid).
- The difference between the highest bid and the lowest ask price is called the bid-ask spread .
- If the one person's bid equals another's ask price, they have found a price at which they're both willing to do business, and the transaction occurs.
- Market makers are a company or individual that quotes both an ask price and a bid.
- The highest price someone is willing to pay (bid) for gold is $742.30 and the lowest someone is willing to accept (ask) is $743.30.
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- (b) eBay allows you to set your maximum bid price so that if someone outbids you on an auction you can automatically outbid them, up to the maximum bid price you set.
- If you are only bidding on one auction, what are the advantages and disadvantages of setting a bid price too high or too low?
- (b) If you are bidding on only one auction and set a low maximum bid price, someone will probably outbid you.
- If you set a high maximum bid price, you may win the auction but pay more than is necessary.
- If bidding on more than one auction, and you set your maximum bid price very low, you probably won't win any of the auctions.
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- (b) If you are bidding on only one auction and set a low maximum bid price, someone will probably outbid you.
- If you set a high maximum bid price, you may win the auction but pay more than is necessary.
- If bidding on more than one auction, and you set your maximum bid price very low, you probably won't win any of the auctions.
- However, if the maximum bid price is even modestly high, you are likely to win multiple auctions.
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- The bid–offer spread for securities is the difference between the prices quoted for an immediate sale (offer) and an immediate purchase (bid).
- A buy limit order can only be executed at the limit price or lower, and a sell limit order can only be executed at the limit price or higher.
- A limit order can only be filled if the stock's market price reaches the limit price.
- If the current bid price for the EUR/USD currency pair is 1.5760 and the current offer price is 1.5763, this means that currently you can sell the EUR/USD at 1.5760 and buy at 1.5763.
- Under competitive conditions, the bid-offer spread measures the cost of making transactions without delay.
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- Since bonds are traded in a decentralized, over-the-counter market dominated by dealers, there can be a lack of price transparency.
- The two types of price transparency have different implications for differential pricing.
- The dealer is then subject to risks of price fluctuation.
- Rather, the dealers earn revenue by means of the spread, or difference, between the price at which the dealer buys a bond from one investor–the "bid" price–and the price at which he or she sells the same bond to another investor—the "ask" or "offer" price.
- The bid/offer spread represents the total transaction cost associated with transferring a bond from one investor to another.
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- Smith and other classical economists before Cournot were referring to price and non-price rivalry among producers to sell their goods on best terms by the bidding of buyers, and not necessarily to a large number of sellers or to a market in final equilibrium.
- Competitive-based pricing, or market-oriented pricing, involves setting a price based upon analysis and research compiled from the target market .
- For instance, if the competitors are pricing their products at a lower price, then it's up to them to either price their goods at a higher or lower price, all depending on what the company wants to achieve.
- One advantage of competitive-based pricing is that it avoids price competition that can damage the company.
- Status-quo pricing, also known as competition pricing, involves maintaining existing prices or basing prices on what other firms are charging.
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- To prepare an appropriate bid for a target company, the buyer has to accurately value the target company through the due diligence process.
- In order to prepare an appropriate bid in the mergers and acquisition process, the buyer must be able to accurately value the target company.
- Synergies are different from the "sales price" valuation of the firm, as they will accrue to the buyer.
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- Cartel members may agree on such matters are price fixing, total industry output, market share, allocation of customers, allocation of territories, bid rigging, establishment of common sales agencies, and the division of profits.
- Each member of a cartel would be able to make a higher profit, at least in the short-run, by breaking the agreement (producing a greater quantity or selling at a lower price) than it would make by abiding by it.
- From 1973 to 1979, the price of oil increased by $70 per barrel, an unprecedented number at the time.
- Discovery of new oil fields in Alaska and Canada introduced new alternatives to Middle Eastern oil, causing OPEC's prices and profits to fall.
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- In an economy, a market system is any systematic process that enables many market players to bid and ask.
- One defining component of markets is the medium of exchange, or the price.
- In market systems, prices are discoverable; both buyers and sellers are capable of finding out the current price at which a transaction could occur.
- Publishing current prices is a key component with a market system.
- The prices at which those sales occur is recorded, and is the basis for the stock price you may have seen in the newspaper or on TV.
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- Due to the high value of some purchases and the complexity of such purchases, the purchasing organization will seek to obtain a number of bids from competing suppliers and choose the best offering.
- Suppliers who are seeking to win a competitive tender go through a bidding process.
- At its most primitive, this would consist of evaluating the specification (issued by the purchasing organization), designing a suitable proposal, and working out a price.
- Explain the bidding process, non-tender purchasing, and features of successful B2B sales