No Quote

Categories: Trading

The financial equivalent of a shrug emoji, a no quote indicates that a security doesn't have sufficient bids and asks to provide a meaningful price. It can mean the security (the stock or bond or whatever) isn't actually trading, meaning that it has become inactive for one reason or another.

Or it can point to a lack of liquidity for the security. There just isn't enough interest on both the buy and sell sides to figure out a price.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Firm Deal: Commit, Qu...7 Views

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Finance allah shmoop What are a firm deal Ah firm

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commit and a firm quote No a lot of firms

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here is by agra involved in this one No Well

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okay people Yes You knew we were going to go

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there We'll start with firm commit Well the whole notion

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of a firm commit applies on a few fronts Like

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if a lender is lending dough Well usually there is

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a contractual agreement cleverly called a firm commitment letter and

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it derives a firm deal like the deal will follow

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that commitment And that letter specifies the amount of money

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the lender is willing to lend at a given interest

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rate With all the terms you know spelled out for

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given time like this offer is good for thirty days

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or until june first Or until the where wolf grows

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What they crow Don't they Okay howl whatever In an

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ai po when a bank is selling shares on behalf

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of a company issuing them a firm commit gives rise

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to a firm deal And it basically says that the

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bank is responsible for selling any unsold shares That is

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It's called a quote bought deal unquote And the bank

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Either sells those aipo shares to investors or well they

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buy them for their own account In a firm quote

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the commitment involved usually refers to a broker dealers bid

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ask spread in selling those shares like she holds a

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few million shares of amazon in inventory and publishes to

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her constituency that she is firm as a buyer at

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eleven hundred two and twenty and a seller at eleven

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hundred eight and fifty Got it sets one one zero

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two point two zero in a cellar at one one

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zero eight point five oh yeah that's how it would

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look well if anyone matches those numbers then she is

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legally obligated to sell them And just in case someone

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wants to buy a good gillian shares i am or

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than she carries in inventory well there's usually a limit

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number attached to her offer for like i stand firm

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on one hundred thousand at this price like a hundred

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thousand shares and not a hundred thousand won something like

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that anyway so firm think obligated confirmed contracted for legally

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binding and sometimes yeah that'll give you cramps Just try 00:02:17.1 --> [endTime] prunes

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