Two different types of spreads are available depending on your chosen broker.
These are:
Let’s take a more detailed look into these two types of spreads.
What are fixed spreads?
Fixed spreads always stay the same; it doesn’t matter how volatile the market gets. However, the spread might differ depending on the financial asset you could be trading.
For example, a forex pair such as EUR/USD will have a different spread to a commodity such as gold. However, the actual spread of these two financial assets will stay the same regardless of price changes.
This happens when you trade through a broker that uses a ‘dealing desk’ model, meaning they purchase large positions from liquidity providers in order to offer those positions to traders in smaller sizes.
This could be beneficial as capital requirements are usually smaller, and a trader always knows the transaction costs.
On the other hand, traders who choose to trade fixed spreads could experience some drawbacks, such as requotes or slippage.
Requotes occur in highly volatile markets when prices are rapidly changing, so the transaction might get blocked when a trader wants to open a position at a specific price. At this point, they might receive a requote message asking to accept the newly quoted price for the same trade.
Slippage occurs when prices are changing so rapidly the broker cannot maintain the fixed spread, which happens after a trader enters a position but ends up paying a different amount for the position to the one they intended.
What are variable spreads?
Variable spreads are the opposite of fixed spreads, which constantly change as the bid and ask prices change.
The bid and ask prices can change due to trading volume, liquidity, volatility, and supply and demand, which, in turn, could affect the spread to widen or tighten.
This type of spread is offered by brokers who don’t use the ‘dealing desk’ method, which means they receive their prices from various liquidity providers and offer them to their traders.
Variable spreads could be beneficial because traders won’t experience requotes due to more transparent pricing, as the broker receives prices from various liquidity providers.
Unfortunately, slippage in any of these two types of spreads is possible.
For scalpers, trading variable spreads won’t necessarily be ideal because widened spreads could take away from their potential profits.