Title: Stock Marketing Expertise Tips
1Stock Markets
2 What is a stock market?
- A stock market or equity market is a market for
the trading of company stock (shares) and
derivatives at an agreed price. - The size of the world stock market was estimated
at about 36.6 trillion USD at the beginning of
October 2008.
3 What is a share/stock/equity?
- Shares represent a fraction of ownership in a
business. The common feature of all these is
equity participation. Different classes of shares
have different voting rights. - Ownership of shares is documented by a legal
document that specifies the amount of shares
owned by the shareholder, and other specifics of
the shares, such as the par value or the class of
the shares (if any). - These days these stock certificates have been
dematerialized.(No physical document!)
4 Who is a shareholder?
- A shareholder (or stockholder) is an individual
or company (including a corporation) that legally
owns one or more shares of a company. - Shareholders are granted privileges depending on
the class of stock, including the right to vote
on matters such as elections to the board of
directors, the right to share in distributions of
the company's income, the right to purchase new
shares issued by the company, and the right to a
company's assets during a liquidation of the
company. - Shareholders vary from individual stock investors
to large hedge fund traders.
5Why does a company issue shares to the
public?
- A company may want additional capital to invest
in new projects. - The promoters may simply wish to reduce their
holding, freeing up capital for their own private
use. - Once a company is listed, it will be able to
issue further shares via a rights issue, thereby
again providing itself with capital for expansion
without incurring any debt. - Financing a company through the sale of stock in
a company is known as equity financing.
6 Trading
- The shares of a company are in general be
transferrable from one shareholder to another .
This leads to buying and selling of shares termed
as trading. - Investors usually buy and sell shares on the
exchanges through a stock brokers registered with
the exchange. - A company may list its shares on an exchange by
meeting and maintaining the listing requirements
of a particular stock exchange.
7 Share price determination
- At any given moment, the price is strictly a
result of supply and demand. The supply is the
number of shares offered for sale at any one
moment. The demand is the number of shares
investors wish to buy at exactly that same time. - Actual trades are based on an auction market
model where a potential buyer bids a specific
price for a stock and a potential seller asks a
specific price for the stock. (Buying or selling
at market means you will accept any ask price or
bid price for the stock, respectively.) When the
bid and ask prices match, a sale takes place.
8 Listing requirements
- The set of conditions imposed by a given stock
exchange upon companies that want to be listed on
that exchange. - Examples include minimum number of shares
outstanding, minimum market capitalization, and
minimum annual income. - These requirements vary from exchange to
exchange. Example Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE)
has requirements for a minimum market
capitalization of Rs.25 Cr and minimum public
float equivalent to Rs.10 Cr whereas the London
Stock Exchange has requirements for a minimum
market capitalization (700,000) .
9 Ways of buying and selling shares
- Through a stock broker They arrange the transfer
of stock from a seller to a buyer. Both the buyer
and the seller of the share pay commission known
as brokerage to the broker. - Directly from the company
- If at least one share is owned, most companies
will allow the purchase of shares directly from
the company through their investor relations
departments. - A direct public offering is an initial public
offering(IPO) in which the stock is purchased
directly from the company, usually without the
aid of brokers.
10 Leveraged Strategies
- Margin Buying
- Buying stock on margin means buying stock with
money borrowed against the stocks in the same
account. These stocks, or collateral, guarantee
that the buyer can repay the loan otherwise, the
stockbroker has the right to sell the stock to
repay the borrowed money. The broker usually
charges 8-10 interest on margin borrowing. - Short selling
- In short selling, the trader borrows stock
(usually from his brokerage) then sells it on the
market, hoping for the price to fall. The trader
eventually buys back the stock, making money if
the price fell in the meantime and losing money
if it rose.
11When to invest in a particular stock?
- Fundamental analysis refers to analyzing
companies by their financial statements found in
SEC Filings, business trends, general economic
conditions and the growth prospects of company's
market segment. A few parameters which are looked
upon include Price to Earnings (PE) Ratio, Price
to Book Value ratio, Equity to Debt ratio. - Technical analysis studies price actions in
markets through the use of charts and
quantitative techniques to attempt to forecast
price trends regardless of the company's
financial prospects. A few examples include Trend
lines, Bollinger Bands, Oscillators etc.
12 Fundamental Analysis
13 Technical Analysis
Up Trend-Line
14 15 Technical Analysis
Bollinger Bands
16 Stock Market Index
- The movements of the prices in a market or
section of a market are captured in price indices
called stock market indices. Such indices are
usually market capitalization weighted, with the
weights reflecting the contribution of the stock
to the index. Examples of index include Sensex,
Nifty, DJIA, SP500, Nikkei etc. - The constituents of the index are reviewed
frequently to include/exclude stocks in order to
reflect the changing business environment.
17Importance and role of the stock markets
- Raising capital for businesses
- Government capital-raising for development
projects - Mobilizing savings for investment
- Facilitating company growth through acquisitions
- Creating investment opportunities for small
investors - Barometer of the economy
18Stock markets and the financial risk
- Sometimes the market seems to react irrationally
to economic or financial news. This may
'temporarily' move financial prices away from
their long term aggregate price 'trends'.
(Positive or up trends are referred to as bull
markets negative or down trends are referred to
as bear markets). Over-reactions may occurso
that excessive optimism (euphoria) may drive
prices unduly high or excessive pessimism may
drive prices unduly low.
19 Stock Market Crashes
- A stock market crash is often defined as a sharp
dip in share prices of equities listed on the
stock exchanges. In parallel with various
economic factors, a reason for stock market
crashes is also due to panic and investing
public's loss of confidence. Often, stock market
crashes burst speculative economic bubbles. - Famous stock market crashes have lead to the loss
of billions of dollars and wealth destruction on
a massive scale.
20 Happy Investing! Thank
You!