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Bid-Ask Spread: Hidden Costs That Eat Your Profits
When you start trading cryptocurrencies, one of the first things you need to understand is the existence of the difference between the price at which you can buy an asset and the price at which you can sell it. This difference is called the Bid-Ask spread, and it works against you on every trade. Although at first glance a few cents may seem insignificant, these microscopic gaps between prices gradually reduce your potential profit.
How the Bid-Ask Spread Works in Cryptocurrency Trading
Imagine you’re looking at a Bitcoin trading chart. You see two prices simultaneously: the highest price buyers are willing to pay (called Bid), and the lowest price sellers are willing to accept (called Ask). There is always a gap between these two prices — this is the Bid-Ask spread.
In practice, in the order book, you’ll see many orders. For example, the best bid for buying Bitcoin might be $44,690, and the best ask for selling might be $44,691. This one-dollar difference between the highest bid and the lowest ask is your Bid-Ask spread. On cryptocurrency exchanges, the size of this spread depends on many factors, mainly on the dynamics of supply and demand.
Why Liquidity Affects the Spread Size
This is where the concept of liquidity comes into play. In markets with high trading volume, the spread is usually narrow because many participants compete for the best prices. When there is high competition between buyers and sellers, everyone tries to improve their position, narrowing the gap between Bid and Ask.
However, in less liquid markets or during high volatility, the picture is quite different. When uncertainty increases and participants are unsure about the price direction, the spread widens. Sellers demand higher compensation for risk, and buyers are less willing to purchase. As a result, the gap between buy and sell prices becomes much larger. This means that if you’re trading an obscure coin or during a market panic, you’ll pay significantly more when entering and receive much less when exiting.
Calculating the Bid-Ask Spread: A Practical Example for Traders
Calculating the Bid-Ask spread is very simple. You just subtract the Bid price (the best bid for buying) from the Ask price (the best ask for selling). Let’s look at a specific example with Ethereum.
Suppose on an exchange, the best bid for buying Ethereum is $3,140, and the best ask for selling is $3,141.50. The spread is $1.50. It seems small, but if this spread remains stable, every time you enter and exit a position, you lose that amount. If you’re an active trader making 10 trades a day, that’s already $15 in losses daily just from spreads, regardless of whether your trades are profitable.
How the Spread Affects Long-Term Profitability
This is why the Bid-Ask spread is critically important for your trading. Every trade involves a small loss of your capital. You buy at the Ask price (above fair value) and sell at the Bid price (below fair value). This means the price must move in your favor enough to offset these losses and reach the break-even point.
Take a real-world scenario with a hypothetical coin ABC. Its fair market price is $0.35, but the Bid-Ask spread is $0.02. When you want to buy ABC, the best available price (Ask) is $0.36. Then, if you immediately want to sell, the best bid for you is only $0.34. This means the price must rise by two cents, or about 5.7%, just for you to break even. This is simply market mechanics working against you from the start.
If you trade frequently, these invisible costs accumulate quickly. Over a month of active trading, spreads can eat up a significant portion of your potential earnings. Professional traders therefore carefully monitor Bid-Ask spreads and choose pairs with high liquidity, where spreads are minimal.
How to Minimize the Impact of Spreads on Your Trades
Understanding how the Bid-Ask spread works is the first step toward smarter trading. Choose trading pairs with high liquidity, trade during periods of high market activity when spreads are narrow. Avoid trading obscure coins or during extreme volatility unless you’re planning a long-term hold. Remember, each point in the Bid-Ask spread is real money you lose, and accumulating these micro-losses can become a serious problem for your profitability.