¿Qué es el deslizamiento en el trading?

5
mins. de lectura
5
mins. de lectura
Ilustración del deslizamiento en el trading

Introduction: The price you see isn’t always the price you get

You click ‘buy’, the market flashes, and the trade goes through. But wait. The price is slightly off from what you expected. Sound familiar? That difference is known as slippage, and it’s something all traders encounter at some point trading guides. The good news? It's not always bad. The key is understanding what it is, when it happens, and how to manage it.

What is slippage?

Slippage occurs when there’s a difference between the price you intend to execute at and the price your order is actually filled at. It’s not inherently positive or negative. It’s simply a shift that happens in fast-moving or thinly traded markets.

There are three types:

  • Positive slippage: You get a better price than expected.

  • No slippage: Your order is filled at exactly the price you wanted.

  • Negative slippage: You get a worse price than expected.


How does slippage work?

When you place a trade, your broker sends that order to the exchange to be filled at the best available price. If prices change in the brief moment between you clicking and the trade executing, slippage occurs.

Why it happens:

  • Rapid price movement: Market prices can shift in milliseconds.

  • Order type: Market orders are particularly vulnerable because they prioritise speed over price precision.

  • Bid/ask spread movement: If the spread suddenly widens — as it often does in volatile moments - you may be filled at a different level than anticipated.


Example of slippage 

Let’s say you’re trading shares of Tesla, and you see a buy price listed at £720.00. You place a market order to buy 50 shares. But before your order is executed, a burst of buying activity pushes the price up to £722.50.

Result? Your trade gets filled at £722.50 - costing you £2.50 more per share than expected. That’s negative slippage.

Flip the script, and if the price drops to £717.50 while your order is being processed, congratulations! You’ve just landed positive slippage.

Market orders vs limit orders

  • Market orders: Fast but imprecise. You’ll get the best available price now - which could be better, worse, or bang on target.

  • Limit orders: Precise but not guaranteed. You set your preferred price, and the trade will only execute if that price (or better) is available. This avoids negative slippage but also risks missing the trade entirely if price moves away quickly.


Volatility and liquidity: The slippage duo market volatility

Slippage tends to rear its head in certain market conditions:

  • High volatility: News announcements, earnings reports, central bank decisions. These can all cause rapid price changes, making slippage more likely.

  • Low liquidity: When there aren’t enough buyers or sellers at a given level, your order may be filled at the next available price, especially true in after-hours trading or with lesser-traded assets.


How to avoid or minimise slippage

While you can’t avoid it 100%, here’s how to keep it in check:

  • Use limit orders to control your entry and exit prices.

  • Trade during peak hours when liquidity is high. For forex, this means the London/New York overlap; for stocks, it’s during the first and last hours of the trading day.

  • Avoid trading during major economic news releases unless you have a solid strategy and can handle the risk.

  • Use slippage tolerance settings (if your platform allows) to specify how much price movement you’re willing to accept.

Pros and cons of slippage

When it works in your favour

  • You can accidentally enter or exit at a better price than you planned - especially in fast-moving markets.

  • It’s a realistic reflection of market behaviour, especially in high-speed electronic trading environments.

  The risks

  • Frequent negative slippage can quietly eat away at your potential profits.

  • It can disrupt automated strategies that rely on exact pricing.

  • In volatile conditions, it can widen your risk beyond what you initially planned.


Slippage isn’t evil. It’s just real.

Slippage is a natural part of live market trading. It’s not always a problem, but it can become one if you’re not prepared. By understanding what causes it and taking steps to minimise it, you stay in control.

Quick recap:

  • Slippage = difference between expected and actual execution price.

  • Market orders are more vulnerable than limit orders.

  • Volatility and low liquidity increase slippage risk.

Use smart order types and trade at liquid times to reduce its impact.

Cuestionario

¿Cuál de las siguientes afirmaciones sobre el deslizamiento es correcta?

?
El deslizamiento solo ocurre en mercados altamente líquidos.
?
Las órdenes de mercado son más vulnerables al deslizamiento que las órdenes límite.
?
El deslizamiento siempre tiene un impacto financiero negativo en sus operaciones.
?

Preguntas frecuentes

¿Qué es el deslizamiento en el trading?

El deslizamiento es la diferencia entre el precio que espera obtener al colocar una operación y el precio al que su orden se ejecuta realmente. Esto suele ocurrir debido a cambios rápidos en los precios o a baja liquidez.

¿La desviación siempre es algo malo?

No, la desviación no siempre es negativa. A veces puede jugar a tu favor (desviación positiva), consiguiéndote un mejor precio del esperado. Otras veces, puede resultar en un precio peor (desviación negativa).

¿Por qué las órdenes de mercado experimentan más deslizamiento que las órdenes límite?

Las órdenes de mercado priorizan la velocidad sobre el precio, por lo que se ejecutan al mejor precio disponible en ese momento. Si los precios se mueven rápido, es posible que no obtenga el precio que esperaba. Las órdenes límite solo se ejecutan al precio especificado o mejor, evitando deslizamiento negativo pero sin garantía de ejecución.

¿Cuándo es más probable que ocurra el deslizamiento?

El deslizamiento es más común durante períodos de alta volatilidad (como durante eventos de noticias) o baja liquidez (como en el trading fuera de horario o en mercados menos populares).

Artículos en esta sección

Pon tus conocimientos en práctica

Descargue Deriv App

Analiza los mercados con información basada en IA

Explorar TradersView

Únete a más de 3 millones de traders en todo el mundo