Ask where a stock's price comes from and most people picture a number being set somewhere. The truth is better: a price is the last trade in a continuous two-sided auction, run by exchanges, fed by brokers, and quoted as two numbers, not one. Understand the machine and half of trading's mysteries dissolve on contact.
The cast: exchanges and brokers
An exchange (NYSE, Nasdaq, and their global cousins) is a matching engine with rules: it maintains the list of what everyone is willing to pay and accept, matches compatible orders, and publishes the results — those are the prices you see. A broker is your access point: you don't send orders to an exchange, your broker does, as a regulated intermediary handling custody, settlement, and rule compliance. Modern U.S. trading is also spread across multiple venues beyond the famous exchanges, but the beginner-relevant fact is unchanged: nobody sets prices; venues match willingness.
The two numbers: bid and ask
At any instant a stock has a bid — the highest price anyone is currently willing to pay — and an ask (or offer) — the lowest price anyone is currently willing to accept. The bid is always below the ask; the gap is the spread. A trade happens only when someone crosses the gap: a buyer pays the ask, or a seller hits the bid. That's all a tick is. The "current price" on your screen is merely the most recent crossing — history, an instant old.
The spread is also your first, invisible trading cost: buy at the ask, and you're instantly down one spread if you turn around and sell at the bid. In heavily traded large-caps the spread is a cent or two; in thin small-caps it can be a meaningful percentage. Which brings in the machine's most underrated property—
Liquidity: how much can trade without moving it
Liquidity is the depth of willingness stacked around the current price — how much can be bought or sold before the price has to move to find more. A liquid stock absorbs a big order with barely a ripple; an illiquid one jumps on a modest order, because the order ate through every offer nearby. This is why volume (Module 5 of the chart course) matters, why big funds can't dart in and out the way small traders can, and why the same dollar order is trivial in one stock and market-moving in another. Liquidity is also the honest explanation of most "manipulation" beginners think they see: thin books make wild prints.
Now connect it to the site's spine: this bid-ask machine is the two-way auction that the Market Profile course reads at the session scale and candles record in miniature. Price moves up when buying eats the asks faster than sellers replace them — literally, mechanically. "More buyers than sellers" stops being a joke phrase once you've seen the book it happens in.
Assignment
Open any free quote page that shows bid and ask (most broker demos and finance sites do). Look up two stocks: one giant household name and one tiny company you've never heard of. Record bid, ask, and spread for each — in cents and as a percentage of price. Then write one sentence on what it would cost, in spread alone, to buy and immediately sell $10,000 of each. You've just measured liquidity with no formula at all.