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These notes should help with your project. CNNFN.COM Yahoo.com Finance. Corporations can raise funds by selling stocks in the form of a share. When you own a share you own a piece of a company . Why would they want to raise money? To perform Ig Why not borrow from a bank?
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These notes should help with your project. CNNFN.COMYahoo.comFinance
Corporations can raise funds by selling stocks in the form of a share. When you own a share you own a piece of a company. • Why would they want to raise money? • To perform Ig • Why not borrow from a bank? • It may be cheaper to sell stock rather than pay interest
You can make money on stocks in two basic ways: • The corporation may pay out some of their profits to each shareholder in the form of a dividend. • If the stock goes up, and you sell, you earn the difference in the price.
Types of stock: • Income stock: pays dividends regularly. • Example: AT&T (T), McDonald’s (MCD), Merck (MRK) • Growth stock: pays few or no dividends and instead invests the profit back into the business. • Often times these companies put this money into R&D • Google (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), eBay (EBAY)
Stocks are risky b/c they may go down. If the company goes bankrupt, you get paid only if there’s money left after many other people have been paid.
Stock Exchanges: • New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ are the two biggest. The NYSE is the biggest and oldest and has all sorts of companies on it. • The NASDAQ focuses more on technology stocks.
A stock exchange is a market. NYSE is a market where you can find all sorts of “goods” • The NASDAQ is very “tech” heavy • NASDAQ stands for National Association of Securities Dealers AutomatedQuotations
Index (indices) • An index is a group of stocks. Some are a large list of stocks, some small. • An index is a way to track stock prices, industries, and the economy on the whole • The Dow Jones Index is a list of 30 stocks. • McDonald’s, Wal-Mart, Microsoft, Boeing • The S&P 500 Index is a list of 500 stocks. • Same as DJIA but with more “detail”/smaller companies
Why buy certain stocks, and not others? • Price, future expectations, dividends paid, and stability amongst others.
One strategy in buying stocks is called dollar cost averaging. • Every month you invest a pre-set amount of money. • The technique of buying a fixed dollar amount of a particular investment on a regular schedule, regardless of the share price. • More shares are purchased when prices are low, and fewer shares are bought when prices are high. (Courtesy of Investopedia.com)
Market Capitalization=price of stock * number of shares outstanding • Sizing Up A Stock Category Market Cap • Nano cap below $50 million • Micro-cap less than $250 million • Small-cap $250 million to $2 billion • Mid-cap $2 billion to $10 billion • Large-cap $10 billion to $200 billion • Mega-cap $200 billion or more
Price to earnings ratio—shows the relationship between a stock’s price and its earnings per share. • Lower means stock has a low price in relation to its earnings per share (value) • Higher means stock has a high price in relation to its earnings per share (more speculative and risky)
52 week high/low • Shows the range of the stock’s price in the past 52 week period (not calendar year). As of the current date to one year ago. • If stock is close to its 52 week high it may be “too” high OR it may have more room to run. Depends on how you look at it • If stock is close to its 52 week low it may be a “value” pick OR it may have more room to go down. Depends on how you look at it
Right now the DJIA is at (or close to an all time high) • Some say it has hit its peak and you should sell • Other say it has more room to run Take into account AT LEAST the following: Time horizon Risk tolerance As you save for something with a long time horizon remember that time is on your side.