Quotation (Finance)
Key takeaways
* A quotation is the most recent sale price of an asset and usually includes bid and ask prices.
* The bid is the highest price a buyer will pay; the ask (offer) is the lowest price a seller will accept.
* The bid–ask spread represents a liquidity cost to traders.
* Quotations also include daily open, high, low, and close values that help show intraday movement.
What a quotation is
A quotation shows the current market price information for a traded asset (stocks, bonds, futures, commodities, etc.). When people refer to “the quote” they most often mean the last trade price, but a complete quote typically lists:
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- Last trade price
- Bid (highest current buy offer)
- Ask/offer (lowest current sell offer)
- Day’s open, high, low, close
How quotations work
The bid and ask represent the prices at which market participants are willing to buy and sell at a given moment. The difference between them—the bid–ask spread—is the immediate liquidity cost of transacting: buyers generally pay the ask, sellers receive the bid.
Wider spreads usually indicate lower liquidity or higher market uncertainty (for example, during market stress or after major news). Daily open/high/low/close values add context about intraday trends and volatility.
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Types of quotations
Stocks
* Stock quotes show last price, bid, ask, and day range. Highly liquid stocks typically have tight spreads; less liquid stocks have wider spreads.
Bonds (fixed-income)
* Bond quotes list bid and ask as well as par value and yield measures.
* Bonds are often quoted as a percentage of par. For example, a corporate bond quoted at 97 trades at 97% of face value—if par is $1,000, the price is $970.
* Par (face or nominal value) is the original value used to calculate maturity payout and coupon interest. Par does not change when market price fluctuates.
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Futures and commodities
* Futures quotes work similarly but represent agreed prices for delivery at a future date. Traders use futures to hedge or speculate.
* Example: buying an oil futures contract at $80/barrel obligates the buyer to purchase (and the seller to deliver) at $80 on the contract’s settlement date. Futures trading typically requires only an initial margin rather than the full contract value.
Practical example
A liquid stock like Apple (AAPL) might close at $165 with a day range of $161–$167. Midday, its bid might be $162.99 and its ask $163.01—a two-cent spread. A buyer would pay the ask and the seller would receive the bid; the last trade price is what most people reference when noting the stock’s current price.
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Common related terms
How to read a stock quote
* Look at the last trade price for the current market price.
* Check bid and ask to understand what price you can likely buy or sell at immediately.
* Review day range and volume for context on activity and volatility.
Real-time quotes
* Real-time quotes update continuously and are essential for active traders. Not all platforms deliver identical latency—faster feeds can benefit high-frequency strategies.
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Nominal quotation
* A nominal quotation is a hypothetical or indicative price (often labeled FYI or FVO). It’s for informational or valuation purposes, not a firm offer.
Interdealer quotation system (IQS)
* An IQS aggregates quotes from brokers and dealers to organize and disseminate price information across markets. Different IQSs may specialize in different market segments (exchanges, OTC platforms, etc.).
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Conclusion
Quotations are the foundational price signals of markets, conveying last traded price plus bid/ask and daily ranges. Traders use them to assess current price, liquidity (via the spread), and short-term market behavior. For execution-sensitive decisions, always consider bid/ask spreads, quote freshness, and platform latency in addition to the headline price.