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Published byHannah Goodman Modified over 9 years ago
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The Stock Market Chapter 11 Section 3
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Buying Stock Besides bonds, corporations sell stock to raise money Stocks are issued as shares Stocks are also a claim of ownership in the corporation
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Benefits of Buying Stock Stockholders can be paid in dividends- based on profits of the company Capital gain- sell the stock for more than originally paid for
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Types of Stocks Divided on whether is pays dividends: income stock or growth stock Can also be classified based on if stockholder has a vote: common stock or preferred stock Stock split- happen when the price of a stock gets too high
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Futures, Options, and Day Trading Futures allows you to establish a price for a commodity ahead of time Option: buy- call option; sell- put option Day trading- buying and selling stocks in one day
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Risks of buying stocks Dividends can be smaller than expected Capital loss can occur as well Stocks are riskier than bonds “Bondholders first”
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How stocks are traded Stockbroker is the middle man between companies and buyers Charge a commission on each transaction Stocks are bought and sold on stock exchanges Ex: NYSE and Nasdaq
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Stock Exchanges NYSE- largest and most powerful in country, must own a “seat” to trade on the exchange. Only blue chip stocks are exchanged OTC market- electronic buying and selling between investors and dealers/ brokers Nasdaq- American market for OTC securities, 3 rd largest in the world
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Bull and Bear Markets Bull market- prices raise steadily Bear- prices fall for a period of time
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The Dow and S&P 500 The Dow- shows the history of certain stocks since 1896, tracks 30 large companies S&P 500- shows overall market performance, tracks 500 different companies in the NYSE, Nasdaq, and OTC markets
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The Great Crash During the 1920s: long-term bull market Oct. 1929 stocks hit $87 billion Only a small % of people owned the stocks, people were buying goods on credit and companies were over producing People were making high-risk investments with life savings Black Tuesday- Oct. 29, 1929- 16.4 million shares were sold for fractions of what they were bought at
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The Great Crash Aftermath The Great Crash contributed to the Great Depression The Fed began limiting the money supply People grew hesitant to buy stocks Mutual funds emerge “Black Monday”: Oct. 18, 1987, The Dow Jones lost 22.6% The Fed helped stimulate the economy to get it above pre-crash levels
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