Monday, February 07, 2011

How the Stock Market Works



How the Stock Market Works
Why Do Companies Issue Stock?
Companies throughout the world issue new stock shares every day. But what is stock, and why does a company issue it? To help you to better understand these important concepts in this tutorial we will discuss:
• What is Capital?
• Equity vs. Debt
• Why Do Corporations Issue Stock?
• Advantages for Stock Holders
Let us begin by defining the word capital.
What Is Capital?
Let's imagine that you decide to start up your own ice cream shop business. You will need to invest in equipment, food supplies and property. All the money that you invest to start your business is called capital. Essentially, the capital of a business consists of all of its assets (or items to assist in the creation of wealth).
What if it dawns on you that you don't have enough cash to buy all the needed assets? Let's see how new businesses and companies deal with this problem.
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Equity vs. Debt
To start a new business (or fund a new project) a company can raise money in two ways - by selling shares of equity or by incurring debt. If the owner of our ice cream parlor invested all their own savings to buy the materials necessary to start the business, they made an equity investment in the company. Equity is simply ownership of a corporation. Typically, ownership units in a corporation are referred to as stock.
However, if our owner did not have necessary funds to start their own business they could finance their operation in one of two ways:
1. Issue stock (or certificates of partial ownership in his company) to people who may be interested in helping their venture out in return for a proportional share of the profits that the company might generate.
2. Borrow money that will need to be paid back with interest.
So, what are the advantages of selling stock?
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Why Do Corporations Issue Stock?
Businesses issue stock to raise capital.
Advantages of issuing stock:
1. A Company can raise more capital than it could borrow.
2. A Company does not have to make periodic interest payments to creditors.
3. A Company does not have to make principal payments.
Disadvantages of Issuing Stock:
1. The principal owners have to share their ownership with other shareholders.
2. Shareholders have a voice in policies that affect the company operations.
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Advantages for Stockholders
As part owner of a corporation, you may be entitled to share in the profits of the company. There is also a chance that the company will grow and the price of the stock may rise.
If the company achieves economic success, the stock value will go up and stockholders will benefit. For example, if you invested $1,000 to buy 100 shares of a company at $10 each and the shares rose to $13 each you would gain $300. This is equivalent to a 30% return. In cases like this, both the stockholders and the business would be pleased.
Initial Public Offerings (IPOs)
The very first sale of stocks to the public is called an initial public offering (IPO), and occurs on the primary market. This tutorial will cover the following factors involved in initial public offerings:
• The Process of Issuing Securities
• The Basics of Underwriting
• Types of Underwriting Arrangements
• The Prospectus
• Ways a Stock May Be Advertised Before it is Sold
• Newly Issued Stocks: Getting the Names Straight
The Process of Issuing Securities
Corporations sell stock to the public as one way to raise capital. Before it can issue new stock, a corporation must first file registration statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) www.sec.gov. A twenty-day wait is required before it can sell the stocks.
The issuing company may make their registration statement public with a preliminary prospectus called a red herring that summarizes the registration statement. Basic information about the new offering is also provided, including how many shares are being offered and which brokerage companies will distribute the stock to the public. At the time of issue, a final prospectus is presented. This includes the price of the stock (its offering price).
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The Basics of Underwriting
A Corporation going public hires an investment banker to help it sell its stock. This process is called underwriting. The investment banker functions as an intermediary between the issuing corporation and the public. In most cases, the underwriter (investment banker) purchases the stocks from the company for resale to the public. To reduce its own risk, the investment banker may form an underwriting syndicate of other investment bankers to co-purchase the shares. The underwriting syndicate forms a selling group to sell specified allotments of the issue. The investment banker (underwriting syndicate) then marks up the price of the offering. This markup represents the fee for the syndicate's service. The difference between the price the underwriter pays and the price the public pays is called the underwriting spread.
The syndicate manager may bid on the stock in the offering to "stabilize" the price. This bid must be less than or equal to the offering price. By law, the prospectus must make this attempt to stabilize the stock price known to the public.
The SEC also requires the underwriter to investigate the issuing company-particularly any audits, how it uses proceeds, its financial statements and the management team. This process is called due diligence.
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Types of Underwriting Arrangements
A stock issue can be underwritten by several methods.
The underwriter can act as an agent, in which it tries to sell as much of the issue as it can at market prices. This is a best effort arrangement.
The issuing company can also agree to issue new stock on the condition that all of it is sold. If all of the stock is not sold, then it will withdraw the issue. This is an all-or-none arrangement.
A negotiated underwriting is when the issuer and the corporation negotiate the terms of the issue, the price, the size and other details.
The issue may be subject to competitive bids from investment bankers. The top bidder underwrites the issue and resells it to the public.
When a public company issues more of its stock, it must first offer that stock to existing shareholders; that is their preemptive right. A standby is the public sale of whatever stock the existing shareholders have not yet purchased.
A firm commitment arrangement is when an investment banker buys all of the stock from the corporation and then resells it to the public at a higher price.
A private placement is an offering in which the company sells to private investors and not to the public. Private placements do not have registration fees.
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The Prospectus
Prospectuses are legal documents that explain the financial facts important to an offering. They must precede or accompany the sale of a primary offering. The law requires companies selling
primary offerings to send prospectuses to anyone who wants to buy a primary offering. Prospectuses may also be used to solicit orders. Customers should read a prospectus carefully before purchasing any primary offering.
Prospectuses include but are not limited to the following:
• Offering price
• Legal opinions about the issue
• Underwriting method
• The history of the company
• Other costs related to investing in the stock
• The management team
• The handling of proceeds
The prospectus must be provided to customers before they complete any transactions. It must also include the SEC's disclaimers that it does not approve or disapprove of the stock being offered, and that it does not judge the prospectus' statements for accuracy.
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Ways an Issue May Be Advertised Before it is Sold
A new issue of stock is allowed to be advertised before it is actually sold, although it may not be sold during the actual registration period.
Registered representatives are allowed to accept oral solicitations from clients. They are not allowed to sell any shares of the new stock. Neither are they allowed to affirm any offers of sale.
Registered representatives may send red herrings, or preliminary prospectuses, to clients. Information in these documents will discuss why the stock is being sold and the offering timetable. Red herrings are only issued for information purposes.
Tombstone advertisements are ads that announce the new stock. Their sole purpose is to function as communication. They are not prospectuses. They are called tombstones because they provide prospective buyers with the "bare bones" information: the name of the stock, the issuer and how to obtain a red herring.
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Newly Issued Stocks: Getting the Names Straight
Two aspects of IPOs deserve special attention: hot issues and the so-called "when, as, and if-issued" stocks.
A hot issue is a security sold by broker-dealers on the secondary market just after it is first issued.
New stock may not be sold until after the registration period has expired. If the stock has not been issued by that time, it may be sold conditionally as a "When, as, and if-issued" stock. Should it fail to be issued, all buys, sells, earnings and losses will be canceled.
This concludes the introductory tutorial on initial public offerings. For more information on investing in IPOs check out the tutorial titled Investing in Initial Public Offerings.
Stock Market Players
As an investor, you need to be familiar with the different players in the investment arena and how they buy and sell securities. Broker-dealers, registered representatives and the others have specific roles in clearing the way for commerce in securities.
This tutorial will cover the following topics:
• Broker-Dealers
• What Broker-Dealers Are Not Allowed to Do
• Other Broker Services
• Registered Representatives, Market Makers and Specialists
Broker-Dealers
A broker is a person or firm that facilitates trades between customers. A broker acts as a go-between and, in doing so, does not assume any risk for the trade. The broker does, however, charge a commission. A dealer is a person or firm that buys and sells for his or her own inventory of securities and for others. A dealer therefore assumes risk for the transactions. Dealers may mark securities up or down to make a profit on their transactions.
Many publications or websites use the term broker-dealer. A broker-dealer is allowed to operate in either role, but never as both at the same time.
To be involved in the buying, selling or trading of securities, a person or firm must be registered with the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). The NASD is a self-regulatory organization created by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Brokers and dealers must follow all rules of the NASD and SEC, including the NASD's Conduct Rules and its rules for arbitration, complaints and dealings with the public.
Broker-dealer status can be revoked for freely breaking securities rules; for having been expelled or suspended from any self-regulatory organization; for making misleading statements to the SEC or the NASD; or for having committed felonies or misdemeanors in the securities industry.
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What Broker-Dealers Are Not Allowed to Do
The following are practices that broker-dealers are forbidden to do:
• Churning: Excessive trading of a client's discretionary account to increase the broker's commissions.
• Use deception or manipulation to trade securities, or failing to state material facts
• Recommending low-priced, speculative securities without determining whether they are suitable for the customer
• Make unauthorized transactions
• Guarantee that loss will not occur
• Try to talk clients into buying mutual funds inappropriate for their means and goals
• Use fictitious accounts to disguise trades
• State that the SEC has approved or judged positively either the security or the broker
• Not promptly transmitting the client's money or securities
Broker-dealers convicted of any of these actions may be expelled or suspended by the NASD.
Because brokers have so much control over other people's money, their activities are highly regulated.
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Other Broker Services
Brokers, when authorized by the client, may set up discretionary accounts. These accounts allow brokers to buy and sell securities for a client's account without contacting the client for each transaction. The authorized broker may determine the security traded, how much of it may be traded, the price and the time of transaction.
Brokers may lend funds to customers who have margin accounts. With margin accounts, customers can buy additional securities with money borrowed from a broker.
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Registered Representatives, Market Makers and Specialists
Registered Representatives
A registered representative is an individual who has passed the NASD's registration process and is therefore licensed to work in the securities industry. The process includes an examination that tests the candidate's knowledge of securities and markets. Further, the registration agreement requires that the candidate agree to follow the rules of the NASD.
Registered representatives sell to the public; they do not work on exchange floors.
Market Makers
Market makers are firms that maintain a firm bid and offer price in a given security by standing ready to buy or sell at publicly-quoted prices. The Nasdaq is a decentralized network of competitive market makers. Market makers process orders for their own customers, and for other NASD broker/dealers; all NASD securities are traded through market maker firms. Market makers also will buy securities from issuers for resale to customers or other broker/dealers. About 10 percent of NASD firms are Market Makers; a broker/dealer may become a Market Maker if the firm meets capitalization standards set down by the NASD.
Specialists
Specialists keep markets for securities orderly and continuous. This means they must buy when there are others selling without buyers, and they must sell when others are buying without sellers. They must maintain their own inventories of securities that are large enough for sizable trades. Specialists both buy and sell out of these inventories and mediate between other customers.
Specialists work on the exchanges where they hold seats. Among their duties is buying and selling odd-lots (trades of less than 100 shares) for exchange members. To trade a security, a specialist must be able to keep a position on it with at least 5,000 shares. Specialists, like others, who buy and sell for the public, are subject to rules and regulations. Specialists often choose to keep inventories in multiple securities, often in more than one market sector.
This concludes our tutorial on brokers, specialists and market makers.
The Life of a Trade
The life of a trade can vary a great deal depending on whether the trade involves a listed, Nasdaq or over-the-counter bulletin board security. The following description is intended to give you a general idea of how the process of trading stocks works.
Trading is based on supply and demand. When you buy or sell a stock, you are literally trading with another investor — someone in your city, across the country or on the other side of the world. An order from you to buy a stock must be matched with a seller's order to sell. If you place an order on the Nasdaq, or one of the many other exchanges, this match may be done electronically.
If your order is sent to the trading room floor of one of the exchanges, the auction process begins. A member of the stock exchange walks to the appropriate trading area where your stock is traded and presents your order. Sometimes there will be a broker in the crowd with a sell order at the same price. In this case your order will be completed or filled. Brokers must often act quickly or risk missing the market. If a broker hesitates, a competitive bid could be placed, driving up the market price for the next trade.
The broker may also hand your order to a specialist. The specialist is a person in each trading area, whose job is to guarantee a fair and orderly market by matching buys and sells or by buying or selling themselves if needed. When an order is away from the market, it can be placed under a specialist's care. From this point on the specialist is in charge of representing your order.
If you placed a GTC order with us, it would stay open until it is filled, canceled by you, or until the last day of the next calendar month. If the order is filled, the broker or specialist will report the fill to us. You can choose to be contacted by phone, fax or e-mail. Of course, if you monitor the Order Status section of the website, you can also see when the order is filled. You will also receive a U.S. Mail copy of your order confirmation and fill. You should check your order confirmation carefully no matter how it is received.
Once the order is filled another process kicks into place; one which is generally invisible to you. First the fill is reported to the Market Data System of the exchange. This system transmits the trade details such as the stock name, the number of shares traded and the price of the trade to all interested parties through the ticker tape. The trade can be seen online, TV or through other media by the investor and other interested parties. The ticker tape will also update the information (sometimes with a time lag) on your Quote Monitor.
The tickets sent to your brokerage firm and the brokerage firm of the person who bought or sold the stock from you is entered into a computer. Over the next few hours, the two trades are matched to make sure they agree. If they do not agree, the brokers meet again to settle any differences. This will not affect your fill. Once agreement is ensured, the settlement process begins. Settlement of the trade generally occurs three business days from the actual trade date. Upon settlement the brokerage firms exchange (usually electronically) the stock certificates and the money for the stock.
Understanding Bull & Bear Markets
Simply put, bull markets are movements in the stock market in which prices are rising and the consensus is that prices will continue moving upward. During this time, economic production is
high, jobs are plentiful and inflation is low. Bear markets are the opposite--stock prices are falling, and the view is that they will continue falling. The economy will slow down, coupled with a rise in unemployment and inflation. In either scenario, people invest as though the trend will continue. Investors who think and act as though the market will continue to rise are bullish, while those who think it will keep falling are bearish.
The basics of bull and bear markets will be reviewed in this tutorial. Specifically we will cover the following:
• What Drives Bull and Bear Markets?
• Predicting Bull and Bear Markets
• Investing During Bull Markets
• Investing During Bear Markets
What Drives Bull and Bear Markets?
What causes bull and bear markets? They are partly a result of the supply and demand for securities. Investor psychology, government involvement in the economy and changes in economic activity also drive the market up or down. These forces combine to make investors bid higher or lower prices for stocks.
To qualify as a bull or bear market, a market must have been moving in its current direction (by about 20% of its value) for a sustained period. Small, short-term movements lasting days do not qualify; they may only indicate corrections or short-lived movements. Bull and bear markets signify long movements of significant proportion.
There are several well-known bulls and bears in American history. The longest-lived bull market in U.S. history is the one that began about 1991 and is still climbing. Other major bulls occurred in the 1920s, the late 1960s and the mid-1980s. However, they all ended in recessions or market crashes.
The best-known bear market in the U.S. was, of course, the Great Depression. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost roughly 90 percent of its value during the first three years of this period. There were also numerous others throughout the twentieth century, including those of 1973-74 and 1981-82.
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Predicting Bull and Bear Markets
Investors turn to theories and complex calculations to try to figure out in advance when the market will scream upward or tumble downward. In reality, however, no perfect indicator has been found.
In their attempts to predict the market, economists use technical analysis. Technical analysis is the use of market data to analyze individual stocks and the market as a whole. It is based on the ideas that supply and demand determine stock prices and that prices, in turn, also reflect the moods of investors. One tool commonly used in technical analysis is the advance-decline line, which measures the difference between the number of stocks advancing in price and the number declining in price. Each day a net advance is determined by subtracting total declines from total advances. This total, when taken over time, comprises the advance-decline line, which analysts use to forecast market trends.
Generally, the A/D line moves up or down with the Dow. However, economists have noted that when the line declines while the Dow is moving upward, it indicates that the market is probably going to change direction and decline as well.
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Investing During Bull Markets
A key to successful investing during a bull market is to take advantage of the rising prices. For most, this means buying securities early, watching them rise in value and then selling them when they reach a high. However, as simple as it sounds, this practice involves timing the market. Since no one knows exactly when the market will begin its climb or reach its peak, virtually no one can time the market perfectly. Investors often attempt to buy securities as they demonstrate a strong and steady rise and sell them as the market begins a strong move downward.
Portfolios with larger percentages of stocks can work well when the market is moving upward. Investors who believe in watching the market will buy and sell accordingly to change their portfolios.
Speculators and risk-takers can fare relatively well in bull markets. They believe they can make profits from rising prices, so they buy stocks, options, futures and currencies they believe will gain value. Growth is what most bull investors seek.
The opposite of all this is true when the market moves downward.
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Investing During Bear Markets
Successful investing in bear markets can involve many different strategies. Some investors try to secure their assets in less volatile securities such as fixed-income bonds or money market securities. Others wait for the downward trend of prices to subside. When it does, they begin buying. Still others seek to take advantage of the falling prices.
When the market goes down, portfolios with a greater percentage of bonds and cash fare well because their returns are fixed. Many financial advisors emphasize the value of fixed income and cash equivalent investments during market downturns.
Another strategy is to simply wait for the downward prices to reverse themselves. Investors who wish to remain invested in stocks may seek out companies in industries that perform well in both bull and bear markets -- shares in these companies are called defensive stocks. The food industry, utilities, debt collection and telecommunications are popular defensive stocks. However, there is no guarantee that a defensive stock will perform well during any market period.
Finally, some investors attempt to exploit profits from the downward price movements. One method is to sell at the beginning of a downward turn, when prices are still high. Proponents of this strategy wait for prices to bottom out before reinvesting in the market. However, as simple as it sounds, this process involves the nearly impossible task of timing the market. Another, more complicated way to attempt to profit from falling prices is called selling short.
Concluding Remarks
There are many investment methods that seasoned investment professionals use to take advantage of opportunities during bull or bear markets. Methods such as dollar-cost averaging, selling short, and diversification exist. Understanding well-founded strategies will help you to improve your chances for superior performance in either market environment. However, there is no surefire way to always succeed. The best weapon you can employ is education. Do your homework!
Fast Markets
You've probably heard about "fast markets" in the news. But what does it really mean? What are the dangers of a fast market? How can you protect yourself as an investor?
We will discus the following topics related to fast markets:
• A Fast Market in Action
• How It Starts
• Protecting Yourself in a Fast Market
• Market Order, Stop Order, Limit Order...What's the Difference?
• Be Aware of How the Trading Process Works
• Timing is Everything
A Fast Market in Action
A fast market is an event that's becoming increasingly common: A hot new technology company goes public. Within minutes of opening the Initial Public Offering (IPO) on secondary markets, investors from around the country are online trying to get a piece of the action. With only a limited number of shares of the small company available, the stock price skyrockets.
Or there's the opposite scenario: A popular stock disappoints investment analysts or fails to meet projected earnings. By the close of market, its stock price has been sent tumbling by investors eager to unload it from their portfolios.
Up and down, volatile stocks have been spiking in both directions — sometimes as much as 10% to 50% — in the course of a day or even a few hours. While this kind of fast market activity has spelled success for some investors, it has meant disastrous results for others.
In a fast, high-volume trading environment, the price of a stock can change so quickly that by the time a real-time quote on the computer screen is updated, it's already history. The result can be market order execution prices drastically different from what an investor expected.
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How It Starts
News about a company hits the wires, like:
• An Initial Public Offering (IPO).
• Change in a company's earnings, positive or negative.
• Recommendation by an analyst or publication.
Trading Gets Heavy
• Internet, phone and broker orders pour in.
• The balance of trade orders is upset with more "buys" than "sells" or vice versa.
Order Executions Are Delayed
• Orders are placed so fast, a backlog may develop.
• Trades are lined up in a queue and executed in the order received.
Systems Can Overload
• Market Makers turn off auto-execution systems and revert to manual order handling procedures in which execution of trades is on a "best efforts" basis. The trading process slows down and the "reasonable time" it takes to execute an order can greatly increase.
• Orders are often subject to partial fills at various prices.
• Trade reports are delayed so investors checking their accounts don't know if their trade was executed. Trying to change or cancel orders may result in duplicate orders or orders that arrive too late to halt the trade.
• Sometimes volume is so heavy that access to brokerage web sites can slow down or be unavailable.
Prices Fluctuate
• Price of the limited number of shares available can change quickly as demand grows.
• Trades executed first in the queue can influence the price of subsequent orders waiting behind them.
• Quotes — including real-time quotes — can't keep up with the huge trading volume and lag far behind actual market prices.
By the time a market order is executed, the stock price may have skyrocketed or plummeted far beyond what the investor expected — as much as 50% or more.
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Protecting Yourself in a Fast Market
The only surefire way to protect yourself in a fast market is to stay out of it. If you feel you must trade during a fast market there are a few things you can do to protect yourself.
Place a Limit Order
When trading a volatile or new stock, you can reduce your risk by placing a limit order specifying the maximum you're willing to pay to buy a stock or the minimum you'll accept to sell a stock.
Unlike a market order, which is an order to buy or sell at the best available price when the order is received in the marketplace, a limit order gives you price protection by ensuring you get your limit price or better. There's no guarantee your trade will be executed, but it's the most effective strategy for limiting your risk.
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Market Order, Stop Order, Limit Order . . . What's the Difference?
A market order is an order to buy or sell a stock as soon as possible at the best price available. In a fast market situation, a market order can be very risky.
A stop order is an order to buy or sell a stock when the price reaches or passes a specified point (the stop price). When that happens, a stop order automatically becomes a market order and is executed at the best price available. In fast markets, however, after a stop order hits the stop price and becomes a market order, it can keep climbing or drop sharply - and ultimately be executed much higher or lower than originally specified.
A limit order is the safest way to trade in a fast market because it's an order to buy or sell a stock only at the specified price (the limit price) or better.
Know What You're Buying
What do you know about the company you're buying? Have you researched it? Buying a stock on impulse or hearsay isn't smart investing. Be sure the company you're buying a piece of is one you really want.
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Be Aware of How the Trading Process Works
Educating yourself about investing is an ongoing process. If you're a new investor or need a review of trading procedures, pick up a book like The Wall Street Journal Guide to Understanding Money and Investing, take a virtual trip to the New York Stock Exchange on the Web at www.nyse.com (click on Education), or locate an investing club in your area through the American Association of Individual Investors at www.aaii.com.
Stay on Track with Your Investment Strategy
When you're considering a stock, first see if the company meets your investment objectives. If you haven't formulated an investment strategy yet, now is a good time to start. Begin by determining your goals and your time horizon, then choose the investments that will best meet them.
Weigh the Risk . . . Before You Click
Before you place a market order for a volatile stock, ask yourself how much you could afford to lose in the event of sweeping price fluctuations. Don't risk spending more than you can afford.
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Timing Is Everything
If you're planning to place an opening market order, make sure your order is entered before 9:20 a.m. Eastern Time. Otherwise, your order may not queue until after the pre-open is completed. At the end of the day, enter market orders at least 10 minutes before closing or your order may not be executed.
Why Watch Market Indicators?
A common and effective way to gain perspective on stock price fluctuations is to compare the movement of your stocks to that of indices or market indicators. About 100 years ago, as the number of individual stocks grew, the need to measure how the stock market performed became obvious. In 1896 The Dow Jones Company took groups of stocks and averaged their prices to create the first indices, the Dow Jones Averages. They created four different indices: one for industrial companies, one for utilities, one for transportation companies and a composite that included the three other indices.
In the 1920s, Standard & Poor's Corporation (S&P) created separate indices. These indices also measured the market as a whole in addition to some sectors of the market. In 1957, when technology enabled the companies to start calculating their indices on an hourly basis, S&P created the S&P 500 Index, which measured the performance of a larger proportion of the market compared to the more popular Dow Jones Industrial Index.
Over the years, the S&P and Dow Jones indices have remained popular, leading both companies to create other indices. In addition, other companies and even the exchanges themselves have created more indices.
Different indices are calculated in different ways. Few remain as simple averages. An index moves when the stocks in it move. When a stock in an index goes up or down, so does the index. Hence, when you hear that the Dow Jones closed at 10,500, down 20 points for the day, it means that the average of the prices of the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow is 10,500 and the combined value of these 30 stocks (as calculated by the index) dropped 20 points during that day's trading.
Calculation method aside, all indices measure the performance of the stock market or some subsection of it on a continuing basis throughout each trading day. By tracking an index, or a variety of indices, investors can quickly gauge market trends that may impact investment decisions.
What is the point of following the indices when what you care about is your own stock portfolio performance?
Indices often reflect trends in the market and in the economy. Watching overall market performance can be the key to making smart decisions about your individual investments. For example:
• Indices can function as benchmarks to compare the performance of the stocks you own against the market in general.
• Comparing today's market movement with similar market movements from the past may help you become aware of trends, and the best times to buy or sell.
You may want to create an index of your own stocks so you can measure your own investments against the performance of the more established indices. As an illustration of how to do this we have created the following hypothetical index.
Stock
12/17 Close
12/18 Close
12/19 Close
ABC
52
51
52
DEF
25-1/2
23 ¾
25
GHI
49
46
47-1/2
JKL
15
15 ¼
15-1/2
Total
141.50
136
140
Average
35.375
34
35
Percent Move
-4%
+3%
Now, you can compare the movement of your index to some of the big market indicators, like the S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or the Nasdaq.
There are a couple of ideas to keep in mind when analyzing indices. First, the percentage move is often more meaningful than the move in points. It means a lot more when the DJIA moves 50 points if it is at 1,000 than if it is at 10,000. Second, while individual stock prices, at least for the time being, are generally expressed as fractions, indices are displayed in decimals.
Dow Jones Industrial Average
One of the best-known market indicators, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, is comprised of 30 leading companies. Calculated by adding the prices of these 30 stocks, the Dow is now considered a figure that indicates the general state of the market. Originally, the Dow divided the sum of the prices of the 30 stocks by 30, giving a true average. However, to be consistent every time a stock split or paid a dividend, the number 30 had to be adjusted. Now, over 100 years later, the sum of the prices of the 30 stocks is divided by a number less than one! Since a $1 movement in the price of a $100 stock counts equally with a $1 movement in the price of a $20 stock, the Dow Jones is considered a price weighted index.
Dow Jones Chart
9/13/99 1:37 PM
Last:
11,033.49
Change:
+5.06
Open:
11,027.40
High:
11,042.36
Low:
10,982.20
Volume:
35,816,500
Percent Change:
+0.05%
Yield:
1.58%
P/E Ratio:
27.99
52 Week Range:
7,399.38 to 11,428.94
Charles Dow designed the average to represent the current business market, which in 1896 included industries such as sugar, leather, tobacco, gas, rubber and coal. Today the DJIA is led by retailers, oil, technology, pharmaceutical and entertainment companies. The only company on the original list that is still included today is General Electric.
S & P 500 Index
Created in the 1920s by the Standard and Poor's Corporation (S & P), this index tracks 500 companies in leading industries: transportation, utilities, financial services, technology, health care, energy, communications, services, capital goods, basic materials, consumer products, cyclicals and more. Many consider it the most accurate reflection of the U.S. stock market today. This high regard has led many money managers and pension plan administrators to use it as a benchmark for judging the overall performance of their fund against the stock market.
Since the calculation for this index equals the price of each stock multiplied by the number of shares held by the public, the companies with the most shares make the greatest impact. This is known as a market weighted index.
Nasdaq Index
This index tracks the stocks on the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System (Nasdaq) stock market. Since many new companies elect to join the Nasdaq, the number of stocks on the Nasdaq has grown from 100 to more than 5,500 today. Because this index includes many companies in the technology sector where market trends change quickly, this index can be volatile
Ameritrade Online Investor Index
The Ameritrade Online Investor Index tracks the daily buying and selling activity of individual online investors at Ameritrade, Inc.
While most major market indices include the activity of institutions and mutual fund companies, the Online Investor Index is unique in that it helps you understand what individual investors are doing in relation to the stock market.
The Online Investor Index does not measure price changes or volume-other indices do that. Instead, the Index measures buyer participation as a behavioral indicator related to investor confidence.
To learn more about the Ameritrade Online Investor Index, visit our website at www.ameritradeindex.com.




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Sensex Calculation Methodology Free Float Market Capitalization



Sensex Calculation Methodology



SUCCESS FOR CAREER

Sensex Calculation Methodology Free Float Market Capitalization

BSE Sensex (or Sensitive Index) is the prime and older indicator of stock market trend in India (the other being the Nifty Fifty). It consists of 30 stocks representing a wide cross-section of industries. It is calculated using a well attested method called free float market capitalization.

What is Free Float Market Capitalization?

Simply put its the market capitalization of all shares in "free float!!!" Free float shares are those that are available for trading in the open market. They rest may be FDI holdings, promoter holdings, locked in shares, strategic stakes, ESOPs etc. Suppose 40% of all shares is openly available. A free float factor is decided by BSE which would be 0.4 (anything in the band of above 35% -40% would have this factor). This factor is multiplied with the total market capitalization of the company (which is the prevailing share price * total no. of shares issued by the company) to get the free float market capitalization.

How to Calculate Sensex??

You know how to find the free float market cap of a company. Now add these for all the 30 companies that constitute the Sensex. You have the total free float market capitalization for the Sensex. The Sensex value is this value relative to a base period. The Base period is 1978-79 and the Base value is 100. The Free-float market Cap is divided by a number called the index divisor to arrive at the right value of Sensex. This divisor factors in changes in scrips, dividend paid, etc right from the base period. A simple way to find the current index divisor would be calculating the previous day's free-float market cap / previous day's sensex.

Here's an example to calculate the sensex

Free Float Market cap (prev day) = 320000 cr
Sensex Value = 16000
Div = 320000 / 16000 = 20
Current Free Float Market Cap = 336000
Current Sensex Value = 336000/20 = 16800
Bingo! You can find out the Sensex Value!.
For the premier Bombay Stock Exchange that pioneered the stock broking activity in India, 128 years of experience seems to be a proud milestone. A lot has changed since 1875 when 318 persons became members of what today is called The Stock Exchange, Mumbai by paying a princely amount of Re 1.

Since then, the country's capital markets have passed through both good and bad periods. The journey in the 20th century has not been an easy one. Till the decade of eighties, there was no scale to measure the ups and downs in the Indian stock market. The Stock Exchange, Mumbai in 1986 came out with a stock index that subsequently became the barometer of the Indian stock market.

Sensex is not only scientifically designed but also based on globally accepted construction and review methodology. First compiled in 1986, Sensex is a basket of 30 constituent stocks representing a sample of large, liquid and representative companies.

The base year of Sensex is 1978-79 and the base value is 100. The index is widely reported in both domestic and international markets through print as well as electronic media.

The Index was initially calculated based on the "Full Market Capitalization" methodology but was shifted to the free-float methodology with effect from September 1, 2003. The "Free-float Market Capitalization" methodology of index construction is regarded as an industry best practice globally. All major index providers like MSCI, FTSE, STOXX, S&P and Dow Jones use the Free-float methodology. (See below: Explanation with an example)

Due to is wide acceptance amongst the Indian investors; Sensex is regarded to be the pulse of the Indian stock market. As the oldest index in the country, it provides the time series data over a fairly long period of time (From 1979 onwards). Small wonder, the Sensex has over the years become one of the most prominent brands in the country.

The growth of equity markets in India has been phenomenal in the decade gone by. Right from early nineties the stock market witnessed heightened activity in terms of various bull and bear runs. The Sensex captured all these events in the most judicial manner. One can identify the booms and busts of the Indian stock market through Sensex.

Sensex Calculation Methodology

Sensex is calculated using the "Free-float Market Capitalization" methodology. As per this methodology, the level of index at any point of time reflects the Free-float market value of 30 component stocks relative to a base period. The market capitalization of a company is determined by multiplying the price of its stock by the number of shares issued by the company. This market capitalization is further multiplied by the free-float factor to determine the free-float market capitalization.

The base period of Sensex is 1978-79 and the base value is 100 index points. This is often indicated by the notation 1978-79=100. The calculation of Sensex involves dividing the Free-float market capitalization of 30 companies in the Index by a number called the Index Divisor.

The Divisor is the only link to the original base period value of the Sensex. It keeps the Index comparable over time and is the adjustment point for all Index adjustments arising out of corporate actions, replacement of scrips etc. During market hours, prices of the index scrips, at which latest trades are executed, are used by the trading system to calculate Sensex every 15 seconds and disseminated in real time.

Dollex-30

BSE also calculates a dollar-linked version of Sensex and historical values of this index are available since its inception.

Understanding Free-float Methodology

Free-float Methodology refers to an index construction methodology that takes into consideration only the free-float market capitalisation of a company for the purpose of index calculation and assigning weight to stocks in Index. Free-float market capitalization is defined as that proportion of total shares issued by the company that are readily available for trading in the market.

It generally excludes promoters' holding, government holding, strategic holding and other locked-in shares that will not come to the market for trading in the normal course. In other words, the market capitalization of each company in a Free-float index is reduced to the extent of its readily available shares in the market.

In India, BSE pioneered the concept of Free-float by launching BSE TECk in July 2001 and Bankex in June 2003. While BSE TECk Index is a TMT benchmark, Bankex is positioned as a benchmark for the banking sector stocks. Sensex becomes the third index in India to be based on the globally accepted Free-float Methodology.

Example (provided by rediff.com reader Munish Oberoi):

Suppose the Index consists of only 2 stocks: Stock A and Stock B.

Suppose company A has 1,000 shares in total, of which 200 are held by the promoters, so that only 800 shares are available for trading to the general public. These 800 shares are the so-called 'free-floating' shares.

Similarly, company B has 2,000 shares in total, of which 1,000 are held by the promoters and the rest 1,000 are free-floating.

Now suppose the current market price of stock A is Rs 120. Thus, the 'total' market capitalisation of company A is Rs 120,000 (1,000 x 120), but its free-float market capitalisation is Rs 96,000 (800 x 120).

Similarly, suppose the current market price of stock B is Rs 200. The total market capitalisation of company B will thus be Rs 400,000 (2,000 x 200), but its free-float market cap is only Rs 200,000 (1,000 x 200).

So as of today the market capitalisation of the index (i.e. stocks A and B) is Rs 520,000 (Rs 120,000 + Rs 400,000); while the free-float market capitalisation of the index is Rs 296,000. (Rs 96,000 + Rs 200,000).

The year 1978-79 is considered the base year of the index with a value set to 100. What this means is that suppose at that time the market capitalisation of the stocks that comprised the index then was, say, 60,000 (remember at that time there may have been some other stocks in the index, not A and B, but that does not matter), then we assume that an index market cap of 60,000 is equal to an index-value of 100.

Thus the value of the index today is = 296,000 x 100/60,000 = 493.33

This is how the Sensex is calculated.

The factor 100/60000 is called index divisor.



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STOCK MARKET TERMINOLOGY


STOCK MARKET TERMINOLOGY
Account Day or Settlement-Date
Day set aside for settlement of account, i.e., transactions between members of a stock exchange, when delivery and payment issues are squared.
Account Statement

A statement to his client from the broker featuring all transactions.
Active Market
Characterized by frequent and large volume of trading of a particular share or shares in general.

Active Shares
Shares in which there are frequent and day-to-day dealings. They are also liquid which implies they are easy to buy or sell.

A-D Index or Advance-Decline Index
A useful tool for detecting bullish or bearish trend in the stock market in which one divides the number of traded shares which have risen in price by those which have fallen.

Ad Hoc Margin
When a member of a stock exchange has an unusually large outstanding position the exchange collects this margin from him.

Allotment Letter
A communication letter sent by the compnay or its agent stating the number of securities and the value in reponse to the investor's application.

American Depository receipts (ADR)
Certificates issued by a U.S. Depositary Bank, representing foreign shares held by the bank, usually by a branch or correspondent in the country of issue. One ADR may represent a portion of a foreign share, one share or a bundle of shares of a foreign corporation.

All or None
(AoN)
This is one of the Special Terms conditions. A buy/sell order with this condition should be matched either with an exactly opposite order or none at all.
Allotment Letter
Letter sent to a successful applicant for shares and debentures conferring ownership of a number of shares and debentures.

Alpha
The amount by which a security’s return differs from the normal return for its level of risk.

Annualized Basis
These returns are computed when the available returns are for less than a year but are converted into a notional annual value for comparison purposes.

Application Money
The amount an investor is asked to pay with the application for new issues.
Appropriations
A term featuring on the balance sheet of a company showing how the net profits, i.e., after tax and after provision for investment allowance reserve have been made, are deployed in distribution of dividends on preference shares and equity shares, transfer to general reserves, and balance carried forward.

Arbitrage
Profiting from differences in price of the same security/currency traded on two or more markets. An arbitrageur makes money by buying in the lower market and immediately thereafter selling in the higher market, or vice versa, thereby making a profit.

Ask Price
The price at which a market maker is prepared to sell.
Assets
Anything owned by a company that has a market value.

At a premium
At a price higher than that printed on the share certificate, i.e., above par. The difference between the face value and the price at which a share is now being issued is called the premium.

At Par
A price equal to the face value of a share, i.e., if the face value of a share is Rs 10 or Rs 100 it is being issued or selling at Rs 10 or Rs 100.

Auction
A mechanism utilised by the Exchange to fulfill its obligation to a counterparty member when a member fails to deliver good securities or make the payments. Through auction the Exchange arranges to buy good securities and deliver them to the buyer or arranges to realise the cash and pay it to the seller.

Auction Market
The buy/sell auction for a Capital Market security is managed through the auction market. As opposed to the Normal market where trade matching is an on-going process, the trade matching process for auction starts after the auction period is over.

Authorised Share Capital
The maximum number of shares that a company may issue, stated in the memorandum and articles of association of the company.

Averaging
Buying a share at different times, in different quantities, and at different prices, so that an advantageous average price is obtained.
Averaging In/Averaging Out
Buying or selling at different prices in order to build up, or liquidate, a substantial holding over a long period.

Backwardation
Term for the fees and interest due on short sales of shares with delayed delivery, or, The payment made by the seller to a buyer for the loan of securities for which the seller wishes to defer the delivery.

Bad Delivery
Delivery of a share certificate, together with transfer deed, which does not meet requirements of title of transfer from seller to buyer is called the Bad Delivery.

Badla
Stocks are divided into 'A', 'B1', 'B2' and 'Z' group on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). The most liquid and heavily in-demand shares comprise the 'A' group (150 on the last count). Under this system, the buyer and seller have the option to carry forward their trades to the next settlement without effecting delivery of shares sold or making payment for shares bought. Simply put, badla is the price payable by the buyer to carry over his speculative purchases to the next settlement. The system helps traders to carry-forward long positions without taking deliveries of stocks purchased. This helps build large volumes on the exchanges and imparts liquidity to stocks.

Bar Charts
A tool of technical analysis, these have vertical bars representing each day's price movement. Each bar covers the distance between the day's highest price to the day's lowest price, with an X to mark the closing price.
Basis Point
0.01%. Foe example, if the yield has gone up by 200 basis points it means it has gone up by 2 %.
Bear
A stock market operator who expects share prices to fall and keeps selling to pick up the shares later a lower price for actual delivery, causing selling pressure and lowering the prices further.
Bear Cycle
An extended period when share prices generally keep falling and the stock market indices keep going down.
Bear Market
Prolonged period of falling share prices.
Beating the Market
Getting a higher return on investments is higher than the market average.
Below Par
A price lower than the face value of a share. A share of face value of Rs 10 trading at Rs eight is said to be below par.
Beta Coefficient or Beta Factor
A relative measure of the sensitivity of an asset’s return to changes in the return of the market portfolio.
Bid Price
It is the price at which a buyer is prepared to buy shares.
Blue Chips
Stocks of well known, renowed companies with a track record of dividend payment and capital appreciation over a period of time.
Book Closures
Before a company declares a dividend or issues bonus or rights share, during the book closure period, transfer of shares is registered. Only those shareholders whose names appear on the register after the book closure are eligible to receive dividends and bonus shares and entitlement to rights shares.
Booking Profit
Making profit by selling a share which has gone above its purchase price.
Book Value
It is determined by dividing the net worth of the company (common stock plus retained earnings) by the number of shares outstanding.
Bottom Line
The net profit or loss figures in an analysis of a company's performance.
Bottom Out
When shares have hit their lowest and are slowly on their path of recovery, they have bottomed out.

Bottom up approach
It is the stock picking strategy whereby the investor looks at the companies with attractive future growth potential and then moves on to consider the industry and the economy factors affecting those stocks.
Bourse
Stock exchange.
Broker
A member of the stock exchange who is licensed to buy or sell shares on his own or on his client's behalf. He charges a commission brokerage on the deals.
Bull
A stock market operator who believes that share prices are going to rise, and keeps buying to sell later at a profit.
Bull Market
Prolonged rise in the price of shares, sustained by buying pressure.
Bull Run
Continued uptrend of sharemarket.
Business Cycle
A period of time during which the general economic activity expands and contracts with effects on inflation, productivity and employment. Thus one recovery and one recession complete a business cycle.
Business Risk
It is the inherent potential of declines in earnings and slowdown in growth in any business or industry.
Buy and Hold Strategy
Accumulating shares of a company over the years for long-term growth benefits and favourable capital gains tax on profits. It is a strategy adopted by the investor whereby he holds on to the investment having full faith in the long term investment strategy ignoring the short term fluctuations.
Buy and Sell Strategy
Active share trading strategy in which shares are bought at dips and sold at peaks. Since the lowest dips and highest peaks are seldom identified, it amounts to buying low and selling high, not holding on to a share or shares for long.
Buy Back
Corporates buying back its own shares or bonds from the share/bondholders
Buy Order
An order to the stockbroker to buy a share or shares.
Buyer's Market
Another name for the Bear Market with an excess of supply of shares over demand, and consequent low prices.
Call
A notice for payment of an installment or the entire unpaid sum of a partly paid share.
Call Option
The right with the registered holder to buy a fixed number of shares at a particular price within a fixed period, in exchange for a premium.
Capital
Contributions made towards the investment in equity and preference shares of the organisation.

Capitalisation
The debt and/or equity mix that funds a firms assets.

Capital Appreciation
Increase in the capital value of shares as their price increases over a period.
Capital Expenditure
Expenditure on acquiring fixed, rather than liquid assets.
Capital Gains
Profit arising out of the sale or transfer of an asset with the cost adjusted for any improvement or depreciation in the asset.
Capital Gearing
The ratio of fixed interest loan and preference shares to the ordinary share capital of a company.
Capital Loss
Loss incurred when investments are sold at a price lower than their purchase price.
Capital Market
Markets where the capital funds-debt and equity are traded. Included are private placement sources of debt and equity as well as organized markets and exchanges.
Capital Reserves
These are undistributable reserves, arising out of profits on the revaluation of capital assets and share premia.
Capital Structure
The capital of a company consists of issued and subscribed equity shares, redeemable preference shares, and secured and unsecured loans. Its structure refers to the mix of debt to equity used.
Carry Forward Trading
The act of postponement of the delivery of or payment for the purchase of securities from one Settlement to another on payment of Contango charges in which the buyer pays interest on borrowed funds (known as ‘Vyaj Badla’) or in which the short seller pays a charge for borrowing securities (known as ‘Undha Badla’).
Cartel
A group of Individuals or businesses that work together to influence the prices.
Cash Basis
Method of accounting in which income and expenditure are entered only when cash is received or paid out.
Cash Dividend
A dividend paid in cash to a company's shareholders.
Cash Flow
In investments, it represents earnings before depreciation amortization and non-cash charges.

Cash Markets
Also called the Spot Market, these are markets that involve the immediate delivery of a security or an instrument.
CB or Cum-Bonus
Shares with bonus entitlement. Buyers of such shares receive the bonus shares distributed by a company on registration of their shares before the Record Date.
CD or Cum-Dividend
With dividend. The buyer of a share at CD price is entitled to the dividend declared if he buys the share before the closure of the company's books, after which the price becomes ex-dividend or XD.
Chalu Upla
Unofficial deal; deal not made on the floor of the stock exchange in the regular manner.
Circuit Breaker
A system to curb excessive speculation in the stock market in which the trading is temporarily suspended when the stock price are volatile and tend to breach the price band.
Clean Balance Sheet
A balance sheet with no debt items, showing that the company hasn't any outstandings.
Clearing
It refers to a process by which all transactions between members are settled.
Clearing House
Each stock exchange has a clearing house attached to it to effect delivery and settle contracts between members.
Closely Held Company
A company whose equity shares are held by a small number of shareholders.
Closing Price
Price at which the last transaction of a particular share was concluded in the stock exchange.
Collateral
An asset pledged against a loan.
Commission
The broker's fee for purchasing or selling securities or property as an agent.
Compounding
When you earn interest, dividends, or capital gains on both your original investment and on the reinvested earnings of your investment.
Contango
In the carry forward transaction the interest which the buyer pays on the borrowed fund.
Contingent Liabilities
Liabilities which a company may have to settle in the event of an unfavorable outcome of a particular event.
Contract Note
Given by the stockbroker to the buyer of the shares, signifying the contract between them to buy/sell the shares at stated price.
Consumer Price Index
A cost-of-living index which is representative of the good and services purchased by the consumers.
Contract Note
A note sent by a broker to his client stating that he has bought or sold a certain number of shares. The unique contract number that it carries validates the transaction done.
Cornering Shares or Cornering the Market
Buying a particular share in a very large quantity so that there is a dearth of shares in the market, and the share price can be manipulated.
Cost of Living Index
A collection of goods and services, and their associated prices, designed to reflect changes over the time in the cost of making normal consumption expenditures.
Cost Averaging
Method of accumulating assets by investing a fixed amount in securities at different intervals. The investor buys more assets when the price is low so as to decrease its overall average cost
Counterparty Risk
The risk in a contract that the other party may fail to honour their commitments.
Cross Holdings
Companies under the same group of promoters holding shares in one another's companies; a common practice in the corporate world.
Cum-Dividend or CD
The buyer of a CD share is eligible to receive the dividend for the preceding year.
Cum-Rights or CR
The buyer of a cum-rights share is entitled to subscribe to the forthcoming rights issue announced by the company. The date up to which a share can be bought cum-rights is announced by the company.
Current Yield
Dividend or interest received calculated as a percentage of a share's or debenture's current market price.
Cyclical Shares
Stocks that tend to rise and fall in consonance with the economic conditions, e.g., housing.
Daily Margin
An amount, to be decided by the stock exchange, to be deposited by a member, on a daily basis, for the purchase or sale of securities. The amount is to be deposited at the stock exchange.
Day Order
It is an order which is valid for the day on which it was entered. If the order is not matched during the day, the order gets cancelled automatically.
Debt-Equity Ratio
The total long-term debt divided by shareholders' equity.
Delisting
Striking off a company's name from the stock exchange so that the company's shares are not traded.
Dematerialization (Demat)
It is a process by which shares in the physical/paper form are cancelled and credit in the form of electronic balance is maintained at the Depository through a DP (Depository Participant).
Depression
Economic condition characterised by falling prices, reduced purchasing power, rising unemployment, excess supply over demand and a general decrease in economic activity.
Derivative
A financial security, such as an option, or future, whose value is derived in part from the value and characteristics of another security, the underlying security.
Dilution of Equity
Decrease in the ownership value of a share as a result of increasing the number of shareholders.
Disinvestment
Reduction of the capital employed by selling off assets or by neglecting to replace used up assets, usually signifying a restriction of the operations of a company.
Diversifiable Risk
Risk unique to a firm or industry, which is not systematically related to the stock market in general.
Diversification
An investor spreading his risk of investment by distributing it among different investment avenue so that the loss suffered on one investment can be offset by gains accrued on the other so as to avoid entire wipe out of the net worth even if one investment has performs poorly on the return front
Dividend Payout Ratio
Percentage of the earnings paid to shareholders in cash.
Dividend Stripping
Paying of dividends to shareholders from funds obtained by sale of assets. Such dividends do not come out of net profits, but from accumulated reserves.
Dividend Yield
Dividend per share divided by its market price, multiplied by 100.
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
Price-weighted average of 30 actively traded blue-chip stocks, traditionally of industrial companies
Dow Rule
Point and figure technique which is buy when the rise in price exceeds the most recent high and sell when the fall in price goes below the most recent low.
Dow Theory
It holds that there is no primary trend in the stock market, unless the movements of industrial, transportation, and utility shares substantially follow the same trend.
Dual Listing
The listing of a share in more than one stock exchange increasing the volume and liquidity.
Earning Per Share
The net income of the firm divided by the number of common stock shares outstanding.
Economic Growth Rate
Annual percentage of change in the gross national product. This is adjusted for inflation to arrive at the real economic growth rate.
Efficient Market
A market for securities in which every security’s price equals its investment value at all times, implying that a set of information is fully and immediately reflected in the market prices.
Efficient Portfolio
A portfolio which ensures maximum return for an accepted level of risk or a minimum level of risk for an expected return.
Either-or-Order
This gives the broker a choice, either to buy, or to sell, not both. The execution of either will cancel the other.
Equities
Ordinary shares of publicly held companies, conferring a share of ownership of the company on the holder who shares the company's profits but whose liability for its losses is limited to the sum of his holding.
Ex-Dividend Date
A publicly announced date on or after which a buyer will not be entitled to the dividend declared on a share. The share price is usually a shade lower on the ex-dividend date.
Face Value
The nominal value printed on the face of the share,debenture or bond.Also known as "Par Value".
Financial Ratios
Ratios of values obtained from a firm's financial statements used to study the firm's health and the price of its shares.
Financial Structure
Distinguished from capital structure of a company which includes only long-term debt and equity, the financial structure of a company is revealed on the right-hand liabilities side of a company's balance sheet, which includes all the items which finance the assets on left-hand side of the balance sheet
Forward Trading
It refers to the trading where contracts traded today are settled at some future date at prices decided today.
Free Market Economy or Market Economy
An economic system in which the government does not interfere in any way with business activity. There are no price controls, no permits, no kickbacks, no trading restrictions or foreign exchange control.
Free Reserves
Accumulated retained profit of a company available for distribution among shareholders. These reserves do not include Capital redemption reserve, or asset revaluation reserve.
Fundamental Analysis
This valuation of stocks based on fundamental factors, such as company earnings, growth prospects, and so forth, to determine a company's underlying worth and potential for growth
Futures Contract
A contractual agreement to buy or sell a specified quantity of a commodity, currency or shares at a particular price on a fixed date in the future.
GDR (Global Depository Receipt)
It is an instrument issued abroad, listed and traded on foreign stock markets. A GDR is convertible into shares, which are listed and traded on the domestic exchange, the dividend being paid in the domestic currency.
Going Long
Buying a share; opposite of Going short where the operation is that of selling.
Going Short
Selling a share that the seller does not actually possess, but hopes to pick up when the price has gone further down, and so make a profit.
Good Delivery
A share certificate together with its transfer deed which meets all the requirements of title transfer from seller to buyer is called the good delivery.
Good-Till-Cancelled Order (GTC)
A client's order to buy or sell shares, usually at a specified price, which remains valid till executed.
Greenshoe
A provision in an agreement with the underwriters of an issue which states that in the event of exceptional investor interest the issuer will authorize additional shares or bonds for distribution.
Grey Market
Unofficial premium market, in which new, not-yet-listed shares are bought and sold.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
The value of all the goods and services produced by a country in one year.
Gross National Product (GNP)
The total value in money of all finished goods and services produced in an economy in one full year, and all net property income from abroad.
Growth Shares
The shares of the companies which are growing rapidly in terms of turnover and profits. Such companies show high P/Es
Hedging
Strategy used to offset investment risk.
Holding Period
The period for which an investor has been in possession of a share; important for the computation of CAPITAL GAINS tax.
Holding Period Return (HPR)
The rate of return for the period of holding of a share.
Hot Money
Money which is transferred at short notice from one international financial center another for fear of exchange rate fluctuations, or in response to changes in rates of interest.
Illiquid Investments
Those shares, debentures, etc., which cannot be readily converted into cash.
Income shares
The shares of the companies which have low P/Es but yield good dividend nad follow a policy of high dividend payout
Index
A measurement of the trend of share prices. It is not just an average of share prices, but weighted to reflect the number of shares outstanding for an individual scrip.
Index Futures
A new mode of stock market investment in which, instead of buying individual shares one buys so many units of a recognised index.
Inflation
The rate of change in a price index over a certain period of time. Equivalently,the percentage change in the purchasing power of a unit of currency over a certain period of time.
Insider Trading
Trading in a company’s shares by a connected person having non-public, price-sensitive information.
Institutional Investor
Organisations that trade large volume of securities, e.g., mutual funds, banks, pension funds, etc.
Instrument
A legal document of contractual obligation.
In the Black
Showing a profit.
In the Red
Showing a loss.
Intangible Assets
Unseen and non-physical assets of a company which are of value to it and also perhaps a cash value e.g. trademarks, copyright, goodwill, patents, etc.
Interim Dividend
An advance instalment of the dividend finally declared.
Inventory Turnover
Annual sales divided by the average cost of inventory gives the ratio of inventory turnover.
IPO
Initial Public Offering; The first offering of shares of a company to the public in the primary market.
Issue Price
It is the price at which new issues are offered to the public, at par, or at a premium.
Issued Capital
The amount of authorised capital issued by a company. A part of the authorised capital may be withheld for subsequent.
Joint Venture
Collaboration, but not partnership, between two complementary companies, sometimes one Indian and the other foreign, to make better use of each other's technology or services.
Jobber
Members of a stock exchange who stand ready to buy and sell shares in which they specialise.

Kerb Trading
Unofficial trading after the normal trading hours of the stock exchange.
Lead manager
When new issues are floated, there may be a number of Underwriters; the one among them who has the primary responsibility of managing the affairs of the syndicate and the issue is the lead manager.
Leverage
A company's long-term debt in relation to equity in its CAPITAL STRUCTURE. The larger the long-term debt, the higher the leverage.
Leverage ratio
The total assets divided by the equity. It indicates the amount of assets the company employs on a unit of equity.
Leveraged company
A company with borrowed funds in its capital structure. If the debt component is more than a third of the capitalisation, it is called a highly leveraged company.
Limit order
The client gives the stockbroker a price limit above which he cannot buy or below which he cannot sell.
Limit price
Price given in a limit order.
Limited liability
A privilege enjoyed by the shareholders of a limited company. If the company goes bankrupt and does not have enough assets to meet its obligations, the shareholders cannot be asked to pay any more. Their liability ends when they have paid for their shares.
Line charts
As distinguished from bar charts, which show everyday price movements, line charts simply connect successive days' closing prices.
Liquidity
It is the state of having cash, or possessing assets which can be quickly converted into cash.
Lot
A fixed minimum number in which shares are bought and sold. Trading lots can comprise 5, 10, 50 or 100 shares depending on the face value of shares.
M1
A measure of money supply which includes all coins and notes in circulation + Demand Deposits with Banks + Demand portion of Savings Deposits with Banks + Other Deposits with RBI (deposits of DFIs etc.). Also called "Narrow Money"
M2
A measure of money supply, including M1, plus Post Office Savings Deposits.
M3
A measure of money supply, including those covered by M1, plus Time Deposits with the Banks. Also called "Broad Money"
M4
Rupee measure of money supply covering all M3, plus All Post Office Deposits.
Market capitalisation
The total market value, at the current stock exchange list price, of the total number of equity shares issued by a company.
Market forces
The forces of demand and supply which determine price in a free market.
Market lot
A fixed minimum number, in which or in multiples of which, shares are bought and sold in the stock exchange. In demat scrips the market lot is one share.
Market risk
This is inherent in the market, depending on how the economy and a particular segment of industry is behaving.
Market timing
The decision when to buy or sell a share or when to switch from one share to another.
Merger
An amicable getting together of two or more companies to form one unit for increased overall efficiency.
Moving average
An average of share prices for specified periods - one week, a fortnight, a month, a year or years - and showing trends of price movements, rather than daily fluctuations. For example, a weekly moving average will take a week's prices till yesterday, and for tomorrow's average it will drop the earliest day and include today instead.
NASDAQ
Short for National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation system. A computerised system that provides up-to-the-minute price quotations on about 5,000 of the more actively traded over-the-counter stocks.
Negotiability
The transferability of a document which, on changing hands, transfers the benefit attached to the document, conferring legal ownership. The document can be simply delivered or endorsed. A currency note is negotiable through simple delivery, whereas a crossed cheque & Co or a bill of exchange is negotiable through endorsement.
Negotiable instrument
An instrument contractual document which is readily transferable, e.g., a bank cheque, a share certificate.
Net block
Value of a company's fixed assets after depreciation. Also called net fixed assets.
Net book value
The value of an asset as it appears on the books of a company as at the date of the last balance sheet, after depreciation has been applied. It is not the market value of the asset.
Net profit
The final profit of a company, after all deductions for interest, depreciation and taxation have been made. It is the black bottom line.
Net worth
Net worth is taken to represent shareholders funds, i.e., equity share capital plus reserves.
Net yield
Profit made on an investment after deduction of all expenses and capital gains tax or income tax, if any.
No delivery period
Whenever a book closure or record date is announced by a company, the exchange sets a no-delivery period for that security. During this period trading is permitted but the trades are settled only after the no-delivery period is over.
Odd lot
A lot of shares other than the market lot.
Offer document
Letter sent by a company making a takeover bid to the members of target company offering to buy their shares at a certain price. It gives details of the offer and reasons for accepting the offer.
Open outcry
A feature of the exchange where traders shout out their buy or sell offers. When these match, the traders have entered into a contract which is recorded.
Operating ratios
These measure a company's operating efficiency by comparing various income and expenditure figures from the balance sheet and profit and loss account.
Opportunity cost
Where there are alternative investment possibilities, a company must compare the benefit derived from choice A with the possible benefit from choice B.
Options
An options confers the right to buy or sell a specific quantity or a number of a particular asset at a specific price at or before some date in the future. It confers on the buyer the right but not the obligation to honour the contract. The obligation rests only with the seller or the writer of the contract. If the buyer chooses not to exercise his option, the maximum loss he suffers is the premium he has paid to the writer of the contract.
Ordinary share
Equity share with full voting rights and entitlement to dividends, rights and bonus issues.
Other income
Income other than from a company's normal activities.
Overcapitalisation
Having more capital than a company needs for business. If it a leveraged company, it will have an unnecessarily high interest burden; also, its profits, by way of dividends, will be thinly spread among the shareholders.
Over the counter trading
Trading in those stocks which are not listed on the stock exchange.
Oversubscribed issue
When there are more shares applied for than are to be issued. In such cases a minimum number of shares, say, 100 shares, is allotted to lucky applicants whose names may come up in the drawing of lots
Overvalued shares
Shares which have caught the investors' fancy, and who, therefore, are willing to pay a price for them which is not justified by their EPS earning per share or P/E ratio.
Paid up capital
Capital acquired by selling shares to investors, as distinguished from capital accumulated from earnings or from secured or unsecured loans.
Pay-in day
Pay-in day is the designated day on which the securities or funds are delivered/paid in by the members to the clearing house.
Pay-out day
Pay-out day is the designated day on which securities and funds are delivered /paid out to the members by the clearing house.
Payout ratio
This is dividend per share divided by earnings per share multiplied by 100. If the payout ratio is 40%, it means that 40% of the company's profits after tax have been distributed as dividend and 60% transferred to reserves.
P/E ratio or price-earnings ratio
Market price per share divided by the firm's earnings per share. A measure of how the market currently values the firm's earnings growth and risk prospects.
Price band
The daily/weekly price limits within which the price is allowed to rise/fall.
Price-to-book ratio
Market price per share divided by book value (tangible assets less all liabilities) per share. A measure of stock valuation relative to net assets. A high ratio might imply an overvalued situation; a low ratio might indicate an overlooked stock.
Price rigging
When a person(s) acting in concert with each other collude to artificially increase or decrease the price of the security.
Point and figure chart
A technical analysis graph that records the ups and downs of individual share prices, disregarding the element of time. Every time a share price moves up an X is put on the graph above the previous point. Every time the share price moves down a 0 is placed one square down in the next column. This chart helps one study the trend of movement - up or down - of a share price for a period of time.
Portfolio
Combined holding of all the financial assets such as shares, debentures, government bonds, Unit Trust of India certificates, bullion and other financial assets.
Premium issue
The issue of shares at a price above the face value of a share. The sum charged above the face value is the premium.
Price/book ratio
Compares a stock's market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities (book). Determined by dividing current price by common stockholders' equity per share (book value), adjusted for stock splits. Also called market-to-book.
Primary market
A market for new issues of shares, debentures, and bonds, where investors apply directly to the issuer for allotment any pay application money to the issuer's account. Distinguished from the secondary market, where investors buy listed shares on the stock exchange through brokers.
Private placement
Shares can be sold to institutional investors on a private placement basis. When they are offered to a favoured few, they are usually restricted shares, and cannot be sold in the marketplace for some specified time.
Profit and loss account
A statement of account of the profit and loss of a business during the accounting period. It summarises the income, costs and expenses of the company over the period, and together with the balance sheet, constitutes a company's financial statement.
Profit after tax or PAT
This is arrived at by deducting expenditure cost of materials, manufacturing expenses, overheads, interest, and depreciation from income net sales plus other income and providing for taxation and investment allowance reserve on the amount.
Profit before tax or sales ratio
Profit before tax divided by net sales and the sum multiplied by a hundred. This is a useful indicator of how efficiently the company is being run.
Prospectus
Formal written offer to sell securities that sets forth the plans of the business enterprise that an investor needs to make a decision.

Quick assets
These are liquid or near-liquid assets, such as cash, money in bank, gold, etc. In financial statement analyses these mean current assets minus inventory.
Quick ratio
Defined as current assets minus inventories divided by current liabilities. A measure of the liquidity of a company, showing whether the company could meet its obligations from the current assets. Also known as the acid test ratio.
Quoted shares
The shares of a company which are officially registered, listed and traded
Rally
Noticeable rise in the price of a share, or a noticeable rise in the share market index, after a period of stagnancy or a declining trend.
Random walk
The hypothesis that share prices wander in a random fashion, because the investors, in a perfectly competitive market, have taken account of all the facts about a share in determining its price. Further changes are therefore caused randomly and no systematic prediction can be made.
Rate of return
The dividend received divided by the price of the share, multiplied by a hundred. The total return on an investment is the sum of dividend received and the appreciation in the price of one's shares.
Ratio analysis
A study of figures in a company's financial statements helps an analyst to arrive at some important ratios, such as quick ratio, debt-to-equity ratio, P/E ratio, and many others. These are then studied in relation to one another and conclusions drawn on the company's health.
Real interest rate
Current interest rate less the rate of inflation.
Real rate of return
Return on an investment adjusted for inflation.
Recapitalisation
Changing a company's capital structure, by bringing in fresh capital, either by creating new shares through issues, or by long-term borrowing, or converting debentures into shares which will pay dividends only when the company is able to.
Recession
Fall in the country's economic activity, for at least two consecutive quarters, as shown in a lowering of the GDP. Not as serious as depression.
Record date
Record date is the date on which the beneficial ownership of an investor is entered into the registers of the members. Such a member is entitled to get all the corporate benefits.
Registrar or transfer agent
It is the institution that maintains a record of all the investors/unit holders of a company/. Normally this institution also mails the notices regarding the holding of the annual meetings and the distribution of dividends to the unit holders. It also supplies the annual statement to the investors representing the account position.
Reserves
Sums set aside from a company's profits and surplus. Can be used to allot bonus shares, but asset revaluation reserves, also called revaluation reserves, cannot be thus used. Debenture redemption reserves and preference shares redemption reserves are used for those specific purposes.
Retained earnings
This part of a company's earnings which is not distributed as dividends, but held back and accumulated for the company's growth or contingency use. Also called undistributed profit or earned surplus or reserves.
Return on capital
Earned profit divided by capital employed, multiplied by 100 to get the percentage.
Return on equity (ROE)
Net income after all expenses and taxes divided by stockholders' equity (book value). An indication of how well the firm used reinvested earnings to generate additional earnings.
Reversal
Sustained fall of share prices from a peak or a high.
Rigging
Manipulation of share prices so as to attract naive investors to buy or sell shares.
Rights issue
Issue of shares at par or at a premium by an existing company to its shareholders in a certain proportion and additional shares, if available to their holdings, as a matter of their right to receive preferential treatment.
Risk
The possibility of loss, inherent in any investment, which one would do well to give suitable weight to while comparing alternative investment prospects.
Rule of 72
A most useful formula for calculating the number of years an investment will take at a compound rate of interest to double. Divide 72 by the compound rate of interest and you get the period of time. Or again, if you know the period of time it takes an investment to double, divide 72 by the number of years and you will get the compound interest rate.


Secondary market
Place where already issued and outstanding shares are bought and sold. Distinguished from the primary market in which the issuer sells shares directly to the investor.
Scrip
Share certificate. Another name for share or stock.
Securities
Financial documents which give the owner specific rights of ownership; these include equity and preference shares, debentures, treasury bills, government bonds, units of mutual fund and any other marketable documents.
Security analysis
A component of the investment process that involves determining the prospective future benefits of a security, the conditions under which such benefits will be received and the likelihood of such conditions occurring. Security analyst
A specialist employed by a brokerage firm, financial journal, bank or investment body to conduct research on investment by analysing the working and finance of individual companies or companies of an industrial group, and make recommendations. The analyst studies the sales and earnings growth, capital structure, P/E ratio, dividend payouts, return on investment, and movement of share prices, combining fundamental and technical analyses.
Seller's market
Characterised by a shortage of shares in the market in relation to their demand and consequent high prices, indicating a BULL MARKET; the opposite of buyer's market.
Selling short
Sale of shares, which one doesn't possess. See badla also.
Settlement
Scrip-wise netting of trades by a broker after a trading period is over.
Settlement date
Day set aside for settlement of account, i.e., transactions between members of a stock exchange, when delivery and payment issues are squared.
Settlement guarantee
It is the guarantee provided by the clearing corporation for settlement of all trades even if a party defaults to deliver security or pay cash.
Share
A share is one unit of ownership of a company.
Share certificate
Documentary evidence of the ownership of a block of shares.
Shareholder
A person or a legal entity who owns equity or preference shares of a company. The proof of his ownership is the share certificate, which he may hold in multiple numbers, each certificate comprising a certain quantity of shares.
Share premium
An amount in excess of the face value of a share charged by a company on its share issue.
Short covering
A short seller usually borrows shares from others for his operation; when he actually buys them to replace what he had borrowed at the time of short sale, he is covering his short position or short covering.
Short position
Shares which a person has sold short, by delivering borrowed certificates, but which he has not yet covered by actually buying shares to repay the loan, as on a particular date.

Speculator
A person, who anticipates price changes and through frequent buying and selling aims to make profits.
Spot trading
Trading by delivery of shares and payment for the same on the date of purchase or on the next day.
Stag
Flash in-and-out speculator who is in the market to make a quick buck. He does not buy shares for long or medium-term investment. Also, one who applies for a new issue, intending to sell at once, what is allotted to him, at a premium.
Stagflation
Slow economic growth plus high unemployment stagnation, accompanies by a rise in prices inflation.
Stock exchange
A marketplace where shares change hands for a consideration.
Stock splits
The process of splitting shares that have a high face value into shares of lower face value. The reverse of combining number of shares of low face value into one share of high face value is called "Consolidation"
Systematic risk
A part of the security's risk that is common to all the securities and cannot be eliminated through diversification; also known as " market risk".
Tangible assets
As distinguished from intangible assets like goodwill, trademark, or patent, these have a physical existence, like cash in hand or bank, gold, real estate, machinery, etc.
Technical analysis
A method of prediction of share price movements based on a study of historic price graphs or charts.
Technical correction
A fall of short duration in the share prices in a rising market; may be caused by a large number of investors booking profit because prices have reached the support level. The support level may, however, be penetrated, and a new emerge.
Technical rally
A short rise in share prices in a declining market; may be caused by investors buying at the current low prices, or prices having reached the support level. As the term suggests, the rally is short-lived, and prices start falling again.
Top down approach
The investment philosophy which involves the EIS analysis. Here the fund manager first looks at the economy, industry and then filters down to the company that are likely to benefit from those favourable economic and industrial trends.
Total yield
What an investor gets from his investment, i.e., dividends or interest and total capital gains through appreciation of the holding by way of rights and bonus issues, as also a rise in the market price. Total earnings plus market appreciation divided by the total cost.
Transfer deed
A transfer deed is a form that is used for effecting transfer of shares or bonds/debentures and is valid for a specific period. It should be sent to the company along with the share certificate for effecting the transfer duly signed and stamped and complete in all respects.
Transmission
Transmission is a lawful process by which the ownership of the securities is transferred to the legal heir(s) of the deceased.
Turnaround
A change for the better in a company's performance. Turnaround situations in companies offer opportunities to investors who can pick up the shares when their price is still low.
Undervalued shares
Shares selling below their book value or the price earning ratio which analysts believe they deserve.
Underwriter
A banker or a financial institution which agrees to buy up the unsubscribe portion of a new issue, should such a thing happen, and sells it later to investors at a premium.
Unloading
Selling shares off when prices are falling to avoid further loss. Bulls, when they get tired waiting for the price to rise, tend to unload when the market is falling, causing prices to fall further.
Unsystematic risk
As distinct from systematic risk, it is risk peculiarly attached to an industry or a company and different from the macroeconomic factors which effect the whole of the economy.
Value investing
It is that philosophy of investment where the investment is made in those stocks that have been beaten down in value and ruling at a price to earning ratio lower than the P/E of the their peer stocks. These stocks are expected to rebounce back with the improvements in the sentiments.
Vertical line charting
Technical analysts' charting of a share's price movement by using a vertical line to represent the high and the low, with a horizontal bar across the point where the day's trading has closed. There is line for each day or each week or each month depending on the breadth of analysis. The chart gives an idea, not only of the trend or price movements, but also the range of fluctuation of the share's price.
Volatile shares
Shares which are subject to sharp fluctuations in price, showing a considerable difference between their highest and lowest recorded prices. Volatility is measure by the formula: highest price minus lowest price, divided by the lowest price, then multiplied by 100.
Volume
Refers to the total volume of shares traded on a particular day and over a period.

Warrant
A security with the market price of its own that can be converted into a specific share at a predetermined price and date.
Weak market
A market in which there are more sellers than buyers, resulting in a decline in prices.
Write-off
Charging an item of assets to expense or loss.
Written down value
Value of an asset, after depreciation has been charged. Also called net book value
XB ex-bonus
The price of a share without the benefit of the bonus declared.
XD ex-dividend
The price of a share without the benefit of the declared dividend.
XR ex-rights
The buyer of a share is not entitled to subscribe to the rights issue announced by the company.
Yield
Percentage return as dividend from a particular share. Current yield is calculated as dividend per share divided by the market price of the shares, multiplied by 100.