Quote from newwurldmn:
Yes. $1/contract.
Max price of $5/order? So a 10 lot doesn't get $10 of pfof?
Quote from newwurldmn:
2-3 dollars per listed contract. includes exchange fees. includes OCC fees.
Quote from Don Bright:
Doesn't matter with electronic executions, if done with one trade, from the actual clearing and execution side. 1 lot or 100 lot, most firms max out early on.
I haven't seen the amount (price of option) of premium to have any effect on the pricing, that must be some weird way to charge more I guess.
Don
Quote from newwurldmn:
I haven't looked at it in seven years. But then we paid a fee of $1/contract for anything we executed on in single stocks. I think we were overpaying. Another firm we tried to deal with said they were getting $1/contact for qqq and a lot less for single stocks. I hadn't heard about the caps, but it would make sense as the larger the order the more informed it's likely to be and thus less profitable.
Quote from babutime:
Kinda confused here.
So 1-2 cents per contract as in 1 option contract representing 100 shares?
Or as someone said multiply by 100 to get the actual $1 to $2 per contract in which case that's mad expensive!!!!
How come I only pay 0.70 per contract so a 10 lot costs me $7 with a minimum of $1 per trade?
Why is retail cheaper? How is IB f#ck!ng me? Someone fill me in...
*lost*
Quote from babutime:
Kinda confused here.
So 1-2 cents per contract as in 1 option contract representing 100 shares?
Or as someone said multiply by 100 to get the actual $1 to $2 per contract in which case that's mad expensive!!!!
How come I only pay 0.70 per contract so a 10 lot costs me $7 with a minimum of $1 per trade?
Why is retail cheaper? How is IB f#ck!ng me? Someone fill me in...
*lost*