Transcript Slide 1

Fall 2013
Accounting I
`
Introduction to Stocks
Basics of Investing I
K. Robinson
What is a stock?
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Common stock
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Gives you a “share” of ownership of a
publicly traded company
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Stock ownership
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Voting rights
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Claim to assets (behind debt holders)
and earnings
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Potentially entitled to dividends
What is a stock?
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Ticker symbols
– Set of letters that represent a security traded
on an exchange
– Ex. MSFT, GS, AAPL, MA, BUD, LUV
Stock quotes
– List of prices for a stock at a particular point
during the trading day
Stock tickers
– What do those green and red numbers mean?
Basic Stock Quote
More Stock Quotes
Different Types of Stock
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Preferred Stock
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Common Stock
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No voting rights to company issues
Issued fixed dividends forever – main form of return
Majority of stock we see and hear about in the news
Ownership of the company
Entitled to portion of the earnings
Earn returns mainly through capital gains
What are capital gains?
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Increase in asset value relative to the purchases price
Not realized until asset is actually sold
Example.
Stocks vs. Bonds
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Stocks are equity
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Generally considered riskier
Quite possible to lose a significant
portion, if not all, of your money
Potential for high returns
Bonds are debt
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Lower and usually fixed return
Higher claim than stockholders
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What does this mean?
What Can Cause Stock Prices to
Change?
EASY!  Supply and Demand!
But…what affects supply / demand of a
stock?
What Can Cause Stock Prices to
Change?
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Earnings & growth expectations
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Positive / negative news
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Economy sentiment
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Investor sentiments & attitudes
Two Markets
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Primary Market – market in which investors
have first opportunity to buy newly issued shares
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Initial Public Offering (IPO)
 First time that company offers its shares to public
markets (securities bought directly from company)
 Where private companies become public
Secondary Market – investors trade alreadyissued shares of companies with each other
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Ie. The stock market
Trading of a company’s stock DOES NOT DIRECTLY
involve the company financially
How Stocks Are Traded
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Major exchanges
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Lists stocks (and other securities), sets
policies for how stocks are traded
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New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
National Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotation
Only “publicly traded
companies” are listed
Markets Indices
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S&P 500
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500 stocks chosen by Standard &
Poor to represent US stock market
 NASDAQ Composite--With
approximately 3,700 companies
and corporations, it has more
trading volume than any other
stock exchange in the world,
many of which are technology and
electronics
 Dow Jones Industrial Average
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30 most significant stocks traded
Stocks Markets & Animals
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Bull Market
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Bear Market
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When everything in the market is going great
and stocks are generally heading upwards
When everything is NOT GOOD and stocks are
generally headed downward
NOTE: Nothing lasts forever! Good times
and bad times will end at some point
http://www.investopedia.com/university/stocks/stocks7.asp
Brokerages
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Need a medium to trade
through – this is where
brokerages come in
Criteria
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Full service vs. discount
Fees (commission)
Services / tools
Minimum balance
Opening an Account
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Not a hard process- most of it just some
paperwork and mail
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Sign-up online and download forms
Mail checks, forms, and copy of ID
Accounts created within a couple of days
What you will need: a computer, starting
capital, and investing know-how
Brokerages
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Some links for brokerage comparisons
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Find something that works for what YOU need
No one broker that is best for all investors
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http://www.investingonline.org/gso/broker_ratings.html
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http://www.consumersearch.com/www/internet/onlinebrokers/
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http://www.stockbrokerguide.com/
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http://online-stock-trading-review.toptenreviews.com/
Different types of Orders
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Market Order
Order to buy/sell at any given time.
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Limit Order
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Order executes to buy / sell at specified price
of better (lower). Limit orders usually cost
more, but useful for getting specified price
Stop Order
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Order executes when the price surpasses a
particular point, which helps buy or sell at a
particular price. Limiting loss or locking profits
Basic Idea Behind Investing
in Stocks
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Buy your stocks when the prices are
low.
Sell your stocks when the prices are
high.
Register for the stock market
game
Join the game!
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Use the information and directions below to join
the game.
URL for your game:
http://www.marketwatch.com/game/robin
son-accounting
Password for this private game: wildcats.
Click on the 'Join Now' button to get started.
If you are an existing MarketWatch
member, login. If you are a new user, follow
the link for a Free account - it's easy!
Follow the instructions and start trading!