dumb noob question: difference between SPY and ES prices?

The low this morning on the ES was 998. I assumed that would correlate to $99.8 on the SPY but the low on the SPY this morning according to yahoo finance was $100.26.

I thought they tracked each other more or less exactly?
 
Quote from Lucrum:

:confused:

You get your quotes/data from yahoo?

I don't daytrade stocks, so yes.

Are you saying that data is wrong? stockcharts.com has the same numbers.
 
Quote from IronFist:

I don't daytrade stocks, so yes.

Are you saying that data is wrong? stockcharts.com has the same numbers.

I guess the question he was trying to get to is: If you are trading, you must have a broker, that broker should be able to provide quotes either via web or via some platform. So why would you use Yahoo for quotes?
 
Quote from IronFist:

I don't daytrade stocks, so yes.

Are you saying that data is wrong? stockcharts.com has the same numbers.

100.26 and 998 are what I show for RTH LOD's.
 
Quote from IronFist:

The low this morning on the ES was 998. I assumed that would correlate to $99.8 on the SPY but the low on the SPY this morning according to yahoo finance was $100.26.

I thought they tracked each other more or less exactly?

100.26 is the correct low for the spys
 
Quote from Maverickz:

I guess the question he was trying to get to is: If you are trading, you must have a broker, that broker should be able to provide quotes either via web or via some platform. So why would you use Yahoo for quotes?

Well i guess since everone is curious...

scottrade is my broker for stocks. when i need a quick quote or to check LOD or something, i pull up yahoo finance because its faster than logging into scottrade, and then trying to find a quote in there.

now, back to my question: why arent SPY and ES more synced up?
 
Quote from IronFist:
The......ES.....would correlate to.....the SPY. I thought they tracked each other more or less exactly?
They do. You also have to take into account the "cost of carry" of one instrument with respect to the other. Futures are "cheaper" because of the extremely low short-term interest rates compared to the dividend rate of the stocks in the portfolio. :cool:
 
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