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Published byBlake Chase Modified over 9 years ago
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Stock as an Investment
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Capital Appreciation- stock may become more valuable and the holder can buy low and sell high Dividend- investor gets a share of the profits returned in cash in proportion to his or her ownership
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Types of stocks Income stock- associated with profitable companies that offer steady dividends Growth stock- people plan to keep the stock for a long time and expect a large capital appreciation
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Preferred stock- gives the investor a fixed share of the profits before common shares
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Stockbroker- buys and sells stock for a living Usually they work for a brokerage house that is a member of several stock exchanges They have a “seat” on the exchange so the company can conduct transactions through that market
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For every transaction made- the investor is charged a percentage (called a commission) Usually from 1 to 5% of each transaction or trade
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If you decide to buy one thousand shares of IBM- you will conduct a transaction on the New York Stock Exchange You will be buying stock that has usually been issued and held by several other investors
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IBM is available to other investors Transactions take place on a secondary market because they have previously been issued
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Markets like NYSE- can have companies offer stock for the first time- known as the initial public offering
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Investment bankers- to decide how much a company’s stock should sell for and how many shares should be offered Initial offerings would be sold to larger investment firms on a primary market
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Once you own a piece of a company, you will want to keep a close eye on how the company is doing Company will contact you frequently to keep you up to date
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They will send you a copy of their annual report It will detail the profits, costs, debts, and future considerations of the company
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52 Week High- the highest price paid for the stock in the year 52 Week Low- the lowest price paid for the stock in the year Stock- the company’s name (sometimes symbol)
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Yield- the percentage return on the investment. It is dividing the annual dividend by the current price of the stock
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Price-Earnings Ratio- the current stock price divided by the company’s earnings per share. The lower the number, the better the value
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Volume- the amount of shares that traded hands that day High- the highest price gotten for the stock during the day Low- the lowest price offered for the stock that day
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Last- the last price offered per share that day Change- the net change from the previous day’s closing price
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Main National Markets New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Most important market in the U.S. More traditional companies list their stock here
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American Stock Exchange (AMEX)- caters to smaller industrial companies Merged with NASDAQ but are still two separate markets
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National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System (NASDAQ)- smaller, unproven companies that want their stock offered nationally will go to this market Newer, high-tech firms (Intel and Microsoft)
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