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http://got.im/XHc

http://got.im/XHc. How the Stock Market Works. http://www.npr.org/2010/12/07/131726215/economics-experiment-pick-the-cutest-animal. Animal Videos. http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/01/14/132906135/ranking-cute-animals-a-stock-market-experiment. Podcast on NPR. PERIOD 8.

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http://got.im/XHc

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  1. http://got.im/XHc How the Stock Market Works http://www.npr.org/2010/12/07/131726215/economics-experiment-pick-the-cutest-animal Animal Videos http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/01/14/132906135/ranking-cute-animals-a-stock-market-experiment Podcast on NPR

  2. PERIOD 8

  3. PLAYING THE STOCK MARKET

  4. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE- • AVERAGE OF 30 STOCKS IN THE MARKET • The DJIA is an index of “blue chip” U.S. stocks. It is called an “average” because it originally was computed by adding up stock prices and dividing by the number of stocks. The 30 companies that make up the DJIA are all major players in their industries; these stocks are widely held by individuals and institutional investors. These 30 stocks represent about 1/5 of the $8 trillion-plus market value of all U.S. stocks. http://nyjobsource.com/djia.html

  5. BULL TRADER- ANTICIPATES INCREASE IN THE PRICE OF STOCKS • Example: Stock ABC sells for $20 a share • You purchase 100 shares of ABC stock, it costs? $____________ (hint: 100x20) • Four months later ABC is now trading for $30 per share. What is the value of your stock? $________________ (hint: 100x30) • If you sold the stock, what would your profit be? $______________ 2,000.00 3,000.00 1,000.00

  6. HINTS TO FIND STOCK AS A BULL TRADER- 1.) The stock should have a range in its 52-week high and low WIDE 2.) The stock should be near the end of that range LOW 3.) The stock should be traded 4.) The stock should have a P-E ratio below 5.) The stock should be trading for less than $ a share HEAVILY 15 30.00

  7. P/E RATIO: If a companies stocks are selling for $40/share and each share is earning a dividend of $2, the P/E Ratio is 20. 40/2=20

  8. BEAR TRADER- SOMEONE WHO BORROWS STOCKS FROM A BROKER EXPECTING THE STOCK TO DROP IN THE HOPES OF MAKING A SHORT SALE—RISKY!!! • Example: Stock ABC sells for $40 a share • You sell 100 shares short. To do this your broker “lends” you 100 shares • You would those shares. How much is your investment worth? $____________ (hint: 100x40) • Four months later ABC is trading for $20 per share. How much would it cost you to pay for the 100 shares of stock? $____________ (hint: 100x20) • By paying for the stock at a lower price then you “short sold” it. How much is your profit? $______________ SHORT SELL 4,000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00

  9. DAY TRADER: • CONSTANTLY TRADING ONLINE FOR A LIVING • Even though this form of trading has become extremely popular with the greater use of the Internet, it is extremely risky!! Some complain that it is as addictive as gambling.

  10. DIVIDEND MONEY PAID TO STOCKHOLDERS • a) Cash dividend: Base your answers on the IBM stock chart. • 1. You own 1000 shares of IBM • 2. The current dividend for IBM is $_________ per share • 3. How much would your dividend check be? $__________ • b) Stock dividend: Base your answers on the IBM stock chart. • 1. From #3 above, how much would your dividend check be? $________ • 2. What is the current price of IBM stock? $________ • 3. How many shares of stock would you receive? ________ 48¢ 480.00 480.00 121 1/8 3.96 (4) hint: 480 / 121.125

  11. CAPITAL GAINS PROFITS MADE ON THE INCREASE OF THE VALUE OF STOCK • The most attractive part of capital gains is they are taxed at a much lower rate than income. You only pay the tax when you sell!! • Example: Bill Gates over a three year period made nearly $20 billion in profit on his shares of Microsoft stock. He paid ZERO DOLLARS in tax because he never sold the stock. If he ever sold the stock, he would pay capital gains tax, not income tax on his profits. Dividends are taxed at your income tax rate.

  12. BUYING ON MARGIN BUYING STOCK WITHOUT PAYING THE FULL PRICE It is similar to putting something on lay-away. Put a portion down now, pay the rest later! • Example: Margin requirement is 20% • 1) You purchase 100 shares of XYZ stock for $200 a share. How much would this investment cost? $________________ • 2) Since you only have to put 20% down, how much cash would you need to buy this stock on margin? $___________ • 3) How much do you still owe on this investment? $________________ • 4) Four months later XYZ stock is trading at $220 a share. If you sold the stock how much would your investment be worth? $____________________ • 5) How much was your profit? $____________ 20,000 4,000.00 16,000.00 22,000.00 2, 000.00

  13. SOME ADVICE ON PLAYING THE MARKET: RISK REWARD • Understand the ___________/________________ ratio. The more risk you take, the more money you could earn or lose! • _____________ on to stocks as long as you can • When the market drops dramatically, _________! ____________! _____________! • Own stocks in at least ________ different industries. TEN is better • Never invest money that you many need. Invest only ________________________ • The stock market reacts to the economy. It rarely influences it. HOLD BUY BUY BUY SIX SPARE SAVINGS

  14. Stock Exchange – SECONDARY MARKET WHERE SECURITIES ARE BOUGHT AND SOLD

  15. The New York Stock Exchange (America’s largest companies): CENTRALIZED • Is considered a __________________ exchange b/c all trades must be • made on the ____________________________________ • Brokerage firms pay for their space on the floor • Minimum qualifications to be traded on the NYSE • ______________________ - $2.4 million in pretax revenue for the most recent year • ___________________ – the company must hold at least $18 million in assets • Market value of common stock at least $_______ million in assets • Publicly held share – _______________________ • Number of shareholders – _______________ EXCHANGE FLOOR EARNING POWER ASSETS 18 1.1 MILLION 2,000

  16. American Stock Exchange – Requirements are much less strict than those on NYSE Is traditionally where smaller companies & new companies start

  17. National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System– Most often referred to as Sometimes called over-the-counter stocks The most volatile exchange b/c it features may hi-tech, insurance, and medical stocks NASDAQ

  18. Bonds & Other Financial Instruments

  19. What is a bond? • Formal contract to repay borrowed $ plus interest on a schedule It is a company borrowing money. Not all companies issue bonds.

  20. Two reasons to invest in bonds • Interest paid on bonds • Gains made by selling bonds MONEY!!

  21. Some Helpful Terms Par value • Amount the bond issuer promises to pay the buyer @ maturity Maturity • Date when the bond is due to be repaid Coupon rate • Interest rate you receive every year until a bond matures Yield • The annual rate of return

  22. Treasury Bonds • Issued by the U.S. Gov’t • Helps keep the gov’t running

  23. Municipal Bonds • Issued by the state & local gov’ts • Used to pay for projects like roads, bridge, schools, etc.

  24. Corporate/Junk Bonds • Issued by companies • Usually for business expansion • Highest risk

  25. Moody’s • A credit ranking agency • Ranks the credit-worthiness of borrowers using a standardized ratings scale

  26. Standard & Poor’s (S&P) • Publishes financial research & analysis on commercial & gov’t entities • Known for its stock market indexes

  27. How Bond Ratings Work

  28. Certificates of Deposit (CD’s) • Form of deposit offered by banks, credit unions, & savings and loans • Have a maturity date (usually 6 months – 5 years)

  29. Mutual Funds • A pool of money managed by an investment company • Allows you to buy a lot of different comp • Purpose is to be DIVERSIFIED

  30. Transaction Log

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