 Hello, welcome to the short video having a look at the price that platter for spread betting in a bit more detail They can see here I've got an order ticket for the US 30 up here I've got a price to sell in the left and a price to buy on the right and it's what we call the level one price as You can see the level one price is always consistent with doing lower trade sizes as you want to do a larger trade size For example, if I'm doing the US 30 and I want to do 400 pounds a point and hit return You can see there that has changed from level one to level six and I'm actually paying a slightly wider spread Now the reason for that is that the price depth ladder system was created to allow larger Positioned traders to transact quite big positions in just one trade Now as you can see there, this is updating all the time based on what's happening on the underlying market liquidity And in this particular example, I can do up to 630 pounds a point on the US 30 in one transaction Now matter of fact if I just push that to the top end of the limit right there You can see the spread there has changed again level 10 I'll be paying a spread of 4.7 4.8 But I'd be able to transact a position with almost a 10 million pounds notional value in just one go. Okay, and You actually can see here that our level one price will allow you to do up to a hunt in this particular example Because of the underlying market liquidity we can do up to do a hundred and eighty nine pounds a point Utilizing a spread our lowest spread of one point form So essentially this feature is it's kind of specific if you're a large position trader And you want to transact in one and one go without having to do multiple transactions Obviously the price can move quite a lot If you want to ensure that you're getting the best possible price to do what one one large trade The price depth ladder is the way to do to do it and effectively this will could this will update real time Depending on what value you actually put into this area right here So if I close the price depth ladder for a second One thing you might notice as well if I access the limit orders or stop entry orders the value that you put in here Is actually always relevant to the level one price being the trigger because obviously you don't know what the underlying market liquidity is going to be like to be able to see Exactly what spread you're going to get at that point So we'll always show your level one prices right here So this is one thing to bear in mind. So if I stick to my market order for example, I'm going to do a trade at 300 pounds a point Hopefully I should have enough margin to replace this trade as you can see it's been executed like so I'm going to then go up to my account area have a look at my position tab as you can see We've got that running in real time You've got the product the steak size the price and everything else And if I actually want to go ahead and see that my history to see exactly how far down the land Or I go executed because of the price that we got all you have to do is Simply go to your history like so You can see the trade right here And then along the top right here you've got an additional icon which will allow you to view additional information and That there will give you basically all the stamp templates of everything as it was triggered your order ID your bet number Your steak size your price everything else like that. You can see that I got I got traded at the level five debt price on the price depth ladder And you get all the information that you can possibly want directly from this screen And that's how easy it is to get to grips with the price depth ladder