Thomas J Catalano is a CFP and Registered Investment Adviser with the state of South Carolina, where he launched his own financial advisory firm in 2018. Thomas' experience gives him expertise in a variety of areas including investments, retirement, insurance, and financial planning.
A book is a record of all the positions held by a trader. The book shows the total amount of long and short positions that the trader has undertaken. Institutional traders maintain a book to facilitate trades for their customers and to monitor for risk and opportunities. This may include trading the positions in the book with customers or attempting to capture the bid/ask spread.
A trader with a simple book may hold only two positions: say one long position of XYZ stock with 1,500 shares and a short position of 1,700 shares in ABC stock. Keeping an up-to-date book allows a trader to be aware of his positions and the risk exposure related to those positions.
A trader will then monitor these positions and look for opportunities to trade their positions against client orders. This may provide the client with a better price than other bids/offers available, and will also allow the trader to offset some of their own position. They may also utilize their positions to capture the bid/ask spread. For example, if the trader can buy and the bid and a client is buying from them at the ask, they can capture the spread for a small profit.
Many traders make a market in a particular stock, bond, futures contract, currency pair, or options market, which means that they facilitate transactions for customers. Traders use their firm’s capital to maintain a book of long and short positions and provide a bid and ask price to investors. The bid is the highest advertised price to buy a security, while the ask or offer is the lowest advertised to sell a security.
The positions within the book will fluctuate in value as the security prices rise and fall. This will impact the profitability of the trader and the firm they work for.
Retail traders may also refer to their own positions as a book, although the term is mostly associated with institutional traders or traders who have clients.
The term book is used in many ways in a financial or business context.
The term book can refer to book value, which is an accounting term used to describe a key measurement of company value. Book value is related to the balance sheet formula of assets – liabilities = equity.
Book value per common share (BVPS) of stock is a ratio that measures the amount of equity the company maintains per share of common stock. In theory, if the company sold all of its assets and paid off all of its liabilities, the amount remaining would be equity. If there is more equity available per common share, then each share is theoretically more valuable to a stockholder. Yet some stock prices trade below book value, while others trade at many times book value, so it is a useful metric but is only one factor to consider when making a stock-related trading decision.
For traders, the order book represents the current depth and liquidity in a market by showing the bids and offers, along with their sizes, in a security. An order book may also refer to the list of a firm’s customer orders that will be filled in future months. The dollar value of the order book is an indication of future sales and the growth prospects of the business. In the financial markets, an order book is all the buy and sell orders currently submitted in a security.
A book can also refer to the customer list maintained by a particular financial professional, salesperson, or small business owner. This book of business is often the key profit center for such individuals.
Assume a floor trader trades Apple Inc. (AAPL) stock. In this case, their book only consists of one stock, but the book must still accurately show how many shares long or short the trader has. For an active trader, this could change substantially throughout the day. The book will also typically show the dollar value of the position(s), as this will help the trader manage their risk and capital.
The trader may open the day with a long position of 10,000 shares. Depending on their view of whether the price will rise or fall overall they may favor buying or selling more. For example, if they are negative about the prospects of the day, if buy orders are hitting the offer, the floor trader may take the opportunity to sell 3,000 shares on the offer. Their book now shows a long position of 7,000 shares.
The price starts getting stronger, and the floor trader’s view turns more bullish. As the price rises, they may look for opportunities to buy during short-term pullbacks or when the bid is getting hit more often. They buy 2,000 shares on the bid. Their book now shows 9,000 shares long.
As the price rises, they take the opportunity to sell 5,000 shares on the offer into strength, locking in a profit. Their book now shows 4,000 shares. This happens throughout the trading day, and for many institutional traders, their book will contain changing positions in multiple stocks or assets.
Investopedia does not provide tax, investment, or financial services and advice. The information is presented without consideration of the investment objectives, risk tolerance, or financial circumstances of any specific investor and might not be suitable for all investors. Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal.
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