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£40 pounds per point is a very lumpy bet given your apparent inexperience. Just as the stock market does not open at the price it closed at the previous day, it should be obvious that the stocks and hence the spread will behave in the same way. Remember that there is a bid offer spread, so the instant you place a trade, any bet would show a loss as it would cost you the spread multiplied by your stake to close it with no price movement.
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Thanks for that Stow...but I have been spread betting and share buying for 29 years now! You have drawn a very wrong conclusion from my post, I'm afraid.
I suspect, as is the major fault with internet posting, that you did not read my post properly. I hold a portfolio of 3/4 million pounds of shares, so I know exactly what I am doing. I also retired at 52 and spend my days going horse racing, so I am a highly experienced punter. Furthemore, I wrote a book on Sports Spread Betting which was published in 1998 by Raceform. A quick search of the internet using surname Knight will lead you to the now out of print book. BUT, despite all of that it simply never occurred to me how the LSE end of day auction filtered through to the spreads. It was a really stupid mistake but you are never too old to learn. I thought the opening prices in the morning took into account the auction the night before, plus any adjustment which the market makers put in for overnight buy and sell orders, plus general work markets movements / events. In other words, I thought the closing price with the spread company stayed like that until adjusted before the markets opened next day. Of course, whenever all these adjustments takes place makes no difference to punters because the price is whatever it is at opening. I was simply surprised to see the price change after the market had closed for trading and wanted to point this out to anyone who may one day experience the same thing as I did that day. As for £40 being a lumpy bet: Well, not to me given my resources but also because I had a guaranteed stop loss, alongside a limit order, on the bet restricting me to £800 loss / profit. So, although my post reads like I am a beginner, I can assure you I am not. It was a stupid oversight by me and I was big enough to post abut it. Hence, I find your post pretty patronising. I am sure you didn't mean it to be but people really need to give more thought when dishing out comment and advice via websites! It demonstrates very well why I rarely bother to post stuff anywhere. |
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Sorry about that. You are quite correct that I appear not to have read your post properly. No offence intended. Best of luck.
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