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Lesson 1 of 8

Introduction to Stock Markets

Welcome to stock market trading! In this first lesson, you'll learn what stocks are, how stock exchanges work, and why millions of people invest in equities.

What is a Stock?

A stock (also called a share or equity) represents ownership in a company. When you buy a stock, you become a partial owner of that company, entitled to a portion of its profits and assets.

Companies issue stocks to raise capital for growth, operations, or debt repayment. In exchange, investors gain potential returns through price appreciation and dividends.

Why Do Companies Go Public?

  • Raise Capital: Access to large amounts of funding for expansion
  • Liquidity: Existing shareholders can sell their stakes easily
  • Prestige: Being publicly traded adds credibility
  • Currency for Acquisitions: Use stock to buy other companies
  • Employee Compensation: Stock options attract talent

How Stock Exchanges Work

Stock exchanges are centralized marketplaces where buyers and sellers trade shares. The largest exchanges are:

Exchange Location Notable Stocks Trading Hours (Local)
NYSE New York, USA Berkshire, JPMorgan, Walmart 9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET
NASDAQ New York, USA Apple, Microsoft, Amazon 9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET
LSE London, UK Shell, HSBC, Unilever 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM GMT
TSE Tokyo, Japan Toyota, Sony, SoftBank 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM JST
💡 Pre-Market & After-Hours Trading

US markets offer extended hours trading:
Pre-market: 4:00 AM - 9:30 AM ET
After-hours: 4:00 PM - 8:00 PM ET

Note: Extended hours have lower liquidity and wider spreads.

Stock Market Indices

An index tracks the performance of a group of stocks, representing a portion of the market. They serve as benchmarks for market performance.

S&P 500
500 largest US companies by market cap. The most followed benchmark for US stocks.
Dow Jones (DJIA)
30 large "blue chip" US companies. Price-weighted, so higher-priced stocks have more influence.
NASDAQ Composite
All stocks listed on NASDAQ. Heavy in technology companies.
Russell 2000
2,000 small-cap US companies. Indicator of smaller company performance.

Market Participants

Understanding who trades in the market helps you understand price movements:

  • Retail Investors: Individual investors like you trading personal accounts
  • Institutional Investors: Mutual funds, pension funds, hedge funds with large capital
  • Market Makers: Provide liquidity by always offering to buy and sell
  • High-Frequency Traders (HFT): Algorithms trading in milliseconds
  • Insiders: Company executives and directors (regulated trading)
⚠ Institutional Advantage

Institutional investors have resources, data, and execution advantages that retail traders don't. Your edge comes from patience, flexibility, and the ability to focus on opportunities they can't (smaller positions).

How You Make Money in Stocks

There are two primary ways to profit from stock investing:

1. Capital Gains

Profit from buying low and selling high. If you buy a stock at $50 and sell at $70, you make $20 per share (minus fees and taxes).

2. Dividends

Some companies distribute a portion of their profits to shareholders as dividends. This provides regular income regardless of price movements.

Approach Focus Time Horizon Example
Growth Investing Capital gains Long-term Buying Tesla for price appreciation
Income Investing Dividends Long-term Buying Coca-Cola for steady dividends
Trading Short-term gains Days to months Swing trading momentum stocks

Key Stock Market Terms

Market Cap
Total value of a company's shares (Stock Price × Shares Outstanding).
Volume
Number of shares traded in a given period. Higher = more liquidity.
Bull Market
Extended period of rising prices (typically 20%+ gain from lows).
Bear Market
Extended period of falling prices (typically 20%+ decline from highs).
IPO
Initial Public Offering - when a private company first sells shares to public.
Blue Chip
Large, established companies with stable earnings (Apple, Microsoft, etc.).

🧠 Test Your Knowledge

1. What does buying a stock represent?

A loan to the company
Partial ownership in the company
A guaranteed return
Employment with the company

2. Which index tracks 500 of the largest US companies?

Dow Jones
Russell 2000
S&P 500
NASDAQ Composite

3. What are the two main ways to profit from stocks?

Capital gains and dividends
Interest and fees
Voting rights and bonuses
Leverage and margin

📋 Lesson Summary

  • A stock represents partial ownership in a company
  • Stock exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ) are marketplaces where shares are traded
  • US markets trade 9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET with extended hours available
  • Market indices (S&P 500, Dow Jones) track groups of stocks as benchmarks
  • Profits come from capital gains (price appreciation) and dividends
  • Market participants include retail investors, institutions, and market makers