Essential Popular

Market Maker

A firm or individual that quotes both buy and sell prices to provide liquidity in financial markets.

Definition

A market maker is a firm or individual that continuously quotes both bid and ask prices for a financial instrument, standing ready to buy or sell at publicly quoted prices. Market makers provide liquidity to markets by ensuring there's always a counterparty available for trades, earning profit from the bid-ask spread.

How It Works

  • Quotes both sides: bid (buy) and ask (sell) prices
  • Must honor quotes up to a specified size
  • Profits from the spread between bid and ask
  • Manages inventory risk by holding positions
  • Uses sophisticated algorithms for dynamic pricing
  • May hedge positions in related markets

Types of Market Maker

Designated Market Maker (DMM)

Exchange-appointed market makers with obligations to maintain orderly markets in specific securities (e.g., NYSE specialists)

Electronic Market Maker

High-frequency trading firms that provide liquidity through automated systems across multiple venues

Forex Market Maker

Banks and brokers that quote currency pairs, often internalize client orders or hedge in the interbank market

Over-the-Counter Market Maker

Dealers who make markets in bonds, derivatives, or other OTC instruments

Trading Tips

1

Market makers profit from volume, not direction

2

Wider spreads during volatile markets protect market makers

3

Retail "market maker" brokers may trade against you (conflict of interest)

4

ECN/STP brokers route orders directly to market, avoiding this conflict

5

Market maker quotes aren't always the best price - check depth of market

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