Stock prices change every day as a result of
market forces. By this we mean that share prices change because of supply and
demand. If more people want to buy a stock (demand) than sell it (supply), then
the price moves up. Conversely, if more people wanted to sell a stock than buy
it, there would be greater supply than demand, and the price would fall.
Understanding supply and demand is easy. What
is difficult to comprehend is what makes people like a particular stock and
dislike another stock.
This comes down to figuring out what news is positive
for a company and what news is negative. There are many answers to this problem
and just about any investor you ask has their own ideas and strategies.
That being said, the principal theory is that
the price movement of a stock indicates what investors feel a company is worth.
Don't equate a company's value with the stock price. The value of a company is
its market capitalization, which is the stock price multiplied by the number of
shares outstanding. For example, a company that trades at $100 per share and
has 1 million shares outstanding has a lesser value than a company that trades
at $50 that has 5 million shares outstanding ($100 x 1 million = $100 million
while $50 x 5 million = $250 million). To further complicate things, the price
of a stock doesn't only reflect a company's current value, it also reflects the
growth that investors expect in the future.
The most important factor that affects the
value of a company is its earnings. Earnings are the profit a company makes,
and in the long run no company can survive without them. It makes sense when
you think about it. If a company never makes money, it isn't going to stay in
business. Public companies are required to report their earnings four times a
year (once each quarter). Wall Street watches with rabid attention at these
times, which are referred to as earnings seasons. The reason behind this is
that analysts base their future value of a company on their earnings
projection. If a company's results surprise (are better than expected), the
price jumps up. If a company's results disappoint (are worse than expected),
then the price will fall.
Of course, it's not just earnings that can
change the sentiment towards a stock (which, in turn, changes its price). It
would be a rather simple world if this were the case! During the dotcom bubble,
for example, dozens of internet companies rose to have market capitalization
in the billions of dollars without ever making even the smallest profit. As we
all know, these valuations did not hold, and most internet companies saw their
values shrink to a fraction of their highs. Still, the fact that prices did
move that much demonstrates that there are factors other than current earnings
that influence stocks. Investors have developed literally hundreds of these
variables, ratios and indicators. Some you may have already heard of, such as
the price/earnings ratio, while others are extremely complicated and obscure
with names like Chaikin oscillator or moving average convergence divergence.
So, why do stock prices change? The best
answer is that nobody really knows for sure. Some believe that it isn't
possible to predict how stock prices will change, while others think that by
drawing charts and looking at past price movements, you can determine when to
buy and sell. The only thing we do know is that stocks are volatile and can
change in price extremely rapidly.
The important things to grasp about this
subject are the following:
1. At the most fundamental level, supply and
demand in the market determines stock price.
2. Price times the number of shares
outstanding (market capitalization) is the value of a company. Comparing just
the share price of two companies is meaningless.
3. Theoretically, earnings are what affect investors'
valuation of a company, but there are other indicators that investors use to
predict stock price. Remember, it is investors' sentiments, attitudes and
expectations that ultimately affect stock prices.
4. There are many theories that try to explain the way stock prices move
the way they do. Unfortunately, there is no one theory that can explain
everything.
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