Originally posted by ron2368
KKD is so bad with that I wont ever try to short it.
:eek:
i'm a new trader that traded briefly at a prop firm which traded nasdaq stocks exclusively, and now i trade at a different firm, and am looking to trade NYSE stocks - simply because they are slower. however, there are several things that are horribly wrong with the NYSE, not including the lack of transparancy and lack of speed. someone mentioned KKD.
on 1/15, i was waiting for a break of $40 to short KKD (it averages over 900k shares) - certainly everyone else was also - the market was something like 40.02 x 40.15. can't remember the size reflected, which often means little on the NYSE, but it was something like 2 x 8. after the 40.02 bid got taken out, the very next quote was 35.50 x 40.15 - a .65 cent spread, or an instant loss of $650 on a 1k share position, then it goes to something like 39.50 x 39.88 or something. that's bullshit. the stock averages nearly 1 million shares a day, not a tremendous amount, but certainly does not warrant a 65 cent spread. thank god i did not use a sell stop, as i never do. of course, i let the trade go, and it closed at 38.08. you tell me, what was i supposed to do, sell at the support level prior to the break?? this is just one of hundreds of instances that happen on a smaller scale constantly throughout the day.
in my limited experience (less than two weeks), if the specialist does not have a good idea of the direction of the stock, it breaks a key level, or the market is going up or down fast, which is basically anytime that poses a risk for the specialist, he will spread the stock to some ungodly level. this morning, there was a .45 spread in MER. merrill lynch averages over 5 million shares a day - a spread that size for a heavily traded stock is completely ridiculous - not to mention that he quotes the size 1 x 1 half the time - come on now. you would never, ever, have a .45 spread on NASDAQ with something that trades 5 million shares. i won't even mention how my limit orders almost never get displayed if they improve the quote. and i know if it does get reflected, or my fill is improved, 90% of the time - i am on the wrong side of the market, or if i'm lucky - the specialist is looking to screw someone else with a bigger order, which is why i'm getting a better fill. additionally, i know that if i'm filled immediately when i take the offer, or hit the bid, i am on the wrong side of the market. i actually started using this as an indicator, and now usually get right out if i'm filled immediately. i used to think people that bitched about the specialist were just deflecting responsibility for there own mistakes - i now know i was wrong. i'll say this though, i'm clearly a novice, and didn't even know redi was not defaulted to use NX. i'll start using it tomorrow - day 11.
rtharp - i plan on reading every post of yours in order to get a better idea of how the NYSE works. if you have any other ideas of where to get in depth info - i'd love to hear them. there are very few worthwile books that go into the depth needed. maybe you should write one

i'd buy it. despite the above complaining, i swear i'm not someone who complains all the time and blames others for my mistakes - what i'm stating absolutely reflects my experience - limited as it is. certainly the NASDAQ has it's issues also. they both have plus and minuses - you just have to educate yourself on them. i am well aware these are the rules, and if you don't like them, then i guess you don't have to play. although, i'm willing to accept these things as a price to be a trader, it certainly doesn't make it right.