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A comprehensive guide to market makers, explaining how they stabilize markets by offering continuous buy and sell quotes.
A market maker is a financial intermediary (usually a broker-dealer or trading firm) that continuously quotes buy and sell prices for a security to ensure liquidity and smooth market operations.
Definition
A market maker is an entity that provides liquidity in financial markets by being ready to buy or sell securities at publicly quoted prices, profiting from the bid–ask spread.
Market makers are essential participants in stock exchanges, forex markets, options markets, and crypto exchanges. Their role is to facilitate efficient trading by ensuring that buyers and sellers can always transact.
They help:
Market makers hold inventories of securities and must maintain consistent quotes even during volatile market conditions.
Bid–Ask Spread:
[ \text{Spread} = \text{Ask Price} – \text{Bid Price} ]
Market makers profit from this spread.
On the NASDAQ, market makers are required to post firm bid and ask prices for specific securities. High-frequency trading firms like Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial are major market makers.
Market makers:
They are regulated to prevent manipulation, though controversies exist.
Not always, volatility and inventory risk can lead to losses.
No, a broker matches buyers and sellers; a market maker takes the other side of trades.