Costing And Price
Information of Stocks
In glancing through the
stock
market prices listed in the newspaper one
might wonder how stocks are priced and what affects price
movement. After all, there is a wide variety of prices and some
well-known companies are traded for relatively low prices while obscure
listings may sell at high prices.
To a certain extent stock market prices are determined by
investor confidence but that confidence in turn is based on real or
perceived performance. Companies report their financial status on a
quarterly basis when they disclose cash flow, sales and earnings. These
hard numbers are the foundation of a company's worth, but investor
speculation can undermine or override actual financial data.
Rumours abound on the stock market, and if there is news that a
company is about to make a strategic move buyers may flock to buy that
stock. As with any other market, the principal of supply and demand
applies. If there is a sudden upsurge in investor interest, the price of
a stock will rise accordingly. Conversely, fear among investors can
cause a stock price to plummet. In the long run, however, company
performance and worth are the biggest factors in determining stock
prices.
Stock market prices are available from many sources. Newspapers
carry market summaries of the day's movements and online sources can
provide current prices around the clock. Stock brokers can also provide stock market quotes – either online or by telephone in the case of
full-service brokers.
A stock market quote table in a newspaper or Internet web site is
full of useful information that can help the investor make decisions
about buying or selling stocks. Being able to read a stock table is a
necessary skill for anyone interested in the stock market.
A typical stock market quote table looks something like this:
Latest Change 52 Weeks
| Symbol |
Price |
Net |
% |
Time |
High |
Low |
Volume |
High |
Low |
| BCE |
31.150 |
0.480 |
1.52 |
16:57 |
31.750 |
31.110 |
3,643,000 |
33.000 |
27.150 |
| BGM |
17.060 |
0.280 |
1.61 |
15:54 |
17.300 |
17.040 |
207,400 |
26.850 |
17.110 |
| IBM |
79.820 |
0.290 |
0.36 |
16:01 |
80.680 |
79.560 |
4,999,200 |
99.100 |
71.850 |
| MSFT |
24.670 |
0.310 |
1.24 |
16:00 |
25.050 |
24.670 |
73,696,700 |
27.940 |
23.820 |
The first column tells you the name of
the company by its ticker symbol – a 3 or 4 character abbreviation. BCE
is Bell Canada Enterprises and MSFT is Microsoft. Ticker symbols can be
looked up on the Internet.
The latest price is the price at the time of publication of the table.
In newspapers this would generally be the day's closing price, but
Internet tables may be updated every few minutes. Publicly viewable
stock prices on the Internet usually have a lag of 15 or 20 minutes.
Change is the difference between the previous day's closing price and
the current quote. Time shows the time of the last transaction. High,
Low, and Volume all refer to the current (or last) trading day. High is
the highest price the stock sold for, Low is the lowest price, and
Volume is the number of shares that have been traded. Finally the 52
week High and Low shows you the highest and lowest prices in the
previous year.
There may be additional columns for information about Bid Price (the
price a buyer is willing to pay), Ask Price (the price a seller is
willing to sell), Price/Earnings ratio (P/E – the stock price divided by
the earnings per share), Market Cap (outstanding shares multiplied by
current market price), and Dividends Per Share (the current annual
dividend the company pays).
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