Stock Market Terminology: A Beginner’s Guide To Stock Trading
Stock Market Terminology: A Beginner’s Guide To
Stock Trading
Young individuals who have the interest and the enthusiasm
for stock trading usually lack the basic domain knowledge of the market.
Although trading doesn’t require a lot of time and money, it is still essential
to equip oneself with some basic tools and necessary training to
take the right decisions. Before you go out into too many technicalities, here
is a little glossary with few key terminologies that you should know before you
start investing in the trade market.
Basic Terminologies Of Stock Market
1. Agent: A brokerage firm is said to be an agent when it acts on
behalf of the client in buying or purchasing of shares. At no point of time in
the entire transaction the agent will own the shares.
2. Ask/Offer: The lowest price an owner is willing to sell the stocks.
3. Assets: Everything the company owns on its name, including the
cash, equipments, land, technology etc. which shows the total wealth of the
company.
4. At the money: A situation at which an options strike price is
identical to the price of the underlying securities. Options trading activity
tends to be high when options are at the money.
5. Bear Market: A market in which stock prices are falling consistently.
6. Beta: It is a measurement of relationship between stock price of
any particular stock and the movement of whole market.
7. Bid: It is the highest price a buyer is willing to pay for a
stock. It is opposite of ask/offer.
8. Blue Chip Stock: Stocks of large,
well-established and financially-sound companies which hold a record of
consistently increasing rate of paying the dividends over decades to its stock
holders. Blue chip stocks typically have a market capitalization in thousands
of crores.
9. Board Lot: A standard trading unit as defined by the particular
exchange board. Board lot size usually depends on the per share price. Common
board lot size are 50, 100, 500, 1000 units.
10. Bonds: It is promissory note issued by companies or government to
its buyers. It speaks about the specified amount held for a specified time
period by the buyer.
11. Book: An electronic record of managing all the pending buy and
sell orders of particular stocks.
12. Broker/Brokerage Firm:A registered securities firm are
called broker/brokerage firm. Broker’s acts as an advisor for
purchase and sell of listed stocks, they do not own the securities at any point
of the time. But they charge a commission for their service.
13. Bull Market: A market in which the stock price are increasing
consistently.
14. Business Day: Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays.
15. Call Option: An option that is given to investor the right but
not obligation to buy a particular stock at a specified price within a
specified time period.
16. Close Price: The final price at which the stock is traded on a
given particular trading day.
17. Commodities: Product used for commerce that are traded on a
separate, authorized commodities platform. Commodities include agricultural
products and natural resources.
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18. Convertible Securities: A security (bonds,
debentures, preferred stocks) by an issuer that can be converted into other
securities of that issuer are known as convertible securities. The conversion
usually occurs at the option of the holder, but it may occur at the option of
the issuer.
19. Debentures: A type of debt instrument that is not secured by
physical assets or collateral. Debentures are backed only by the general
creditworthiness and reputation of the issuer.A debenture is an unsecured form
of investment.
20. Defensive Stock: A stock that provides a constant dividends and
stable earnings even in the periods of economic downturn i.e. even in the
extreme critical situations of the stock market these companies continue to pay
the dividends at a constant rate.
21. Delta: The ratio that compares the change in the price of the
underlying asset to the corresponding change in the price of a derivative.
Sometimes referred to as the hedge ratio. It has a range from 0 to 1.
22. Derivatives: A security whose price is derived from one or more
underlying assets. The most common underlying assets include stocks, bonds,
commodities, currencies, interest rates and market indexes.
23. Diversification: Reducing the investment risk by purchasing
shares of different companies operating in different sectors.
24. Dividend: A portion of the company’s earnings decided to pay to
its shareholders in return to their investments. It is usually declared as
a percentage of current share price or some specified INR value, usually
decided by the board of directors of the company.
25. Equity: Common and preferred stocks, which represents shares in
the ownership of a company.
26. Face value: It is the cash denomination or the amount of money
the holder of the individual security going to earn from the issuer of the
security at the time of maturity. It is also known as par value.
27. Hedge: A strategy or an attempt in reducing the risk of adverse
price movements of assets.
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28. Income Stock: A security which has a solid
record of dividend payments and offers the dividend higher than the common
stocks.
29. Index: A statistical measurement of change in the economy or
security market. Indices have their own calculation methodology and are usually
measured as a percentage change in the base value over the time.
30. Initial Public Offering (IPO): A company’s first issue of shares
to general public. IPOs are issued by smaller, younger companies seeking funds
for expansion and growth, but large companies also practice this to become
publicly traded companies.
31. Internet Trading: Internet Trading is a platform with Internet as
a medium. Internet trading execution takes place through order routing system,
which will rout traders order to exchange trading system. Thus traders sitting
in any part of the world can be able to trade using their brokers Internet
Trading System. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI)
approved Internet Trading in January 2000.
32. Limit Order: An order to buy or sell a share at a specified
price. The order will be executed only at the specified limit price or even
better. A limit order sets a minimum price the seller is willing to accept and
maximum price the buyer is willing to pay for it.
33. Listed Stocks: The shares of an issuer that are traded on the
stock exchange. The issuer has to pay fees to be listed in the stock exchange
and abide by the regulations of the stock exchange to maintain listing
privilege.
34. Market Capitalization: The total value in INR of all of a
company’s outstanding shares. It is calculated by multiplying all the
outstanding shares with the current market price of one share. It determines
the company’s size in terms of its wealth.
35. Mutual Fund: A pool of money managed by experts by investing in
stocks, bonds and other securities with the objective of improving their
savings. These experts will create a diversified portfolio from these funds.
36. Odd Lot: A number of shares which are less than or greater than
but not equal to the board lot size. For example, if the board lot size is 100
shares, an odd lot would be 95 or 102 shares. Usually odd lots are difficult
for trading and it is not accepted easily in the market.
37. One-sided Market: A market that has only potential sellers or
only potential buyers but not both.
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38. Out-of-The-Money (OTM): For call options, this means
the stock price is below the strike price. For put options, this means the
stock price is above the strike price. The price of out-of-the-money options
consists entirely of “time value.”
39. Portfolio: Holding of any individual or institution. A portfolio
may include various type of securities of different companies operating in
different sectors.
40. Positions Limit: Maximum number of futures and options contract
that any individual investor can hold at any given point of time.
41. Pre-opening Session: The pre-open session is for duration of 15
minutes i.e. from 9:00 AM to 9:15 AM. In pre-open session order entry,
modification and cancelation takes place.
42. Price Earnings (P/E) Ratio: A valuation of companies last traded
share price to its latest reported 12 months earnings per share. For example,
if the last traded share price of any X company is INR 40 and earnings over a
last 12 months per share is INR 2, then the P/E ratio of that X company is INR
20 (40/2)
43. Put Option: An option that is given to investor the right to sell
a particular stock at a stated price within a specified time period. Put option
is purchased by those who believe that particular stock price is going to fall
down than the stated price.
44. Risk:A probable chances of investments actual returns will be reduced
then as calculated. Risk is usually measured by calculating the standard
deviation of the historical price returns. Standard deviation is directly
proportional to the degree of risk associated.
45. Securities: A transferable certificate of ownership of investment
in products such as stocks, bonds, future contracts and options which an
individual holds.
46. Strike Price: The price at which the holder of an option can buy
(in case of call option) or sell (in case of put option) the securities they
hold when the option is executed.
47. Stock Split: An attempt to increase the number of outstanding
shares of a company by splitting the existing shares. It is usually done to
increase the availability of shares in the market. The usual split ratio is 2:1
or 3:1, i.e. one share is split into two or three.
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48. Thin Market: A market in which there are
comparatively low number of bids to buy and offers to sell. Since the number of
transactions is low the prices are very volatile.
49. Trading session: The period of time from 9:15 AM to 3:30 PM is
open for trading for both sellers and buyers, within this time frame all the
orders of the day must be placed. Here all the orders placed in pre-opening
sessions are matched and executed.
50. Yield: It is the measure of return on investments in terms of
percentage. Stock yield is calculated by dividing the current price of the
share by the annual dividend paid by the company for that share. For example,
if the current price of the share is INR 100 and the dividend paid is INR 5 per
share annually, then the stock yield is 5%.
(About the author: The article is written by Amit sharda, Co-Founder and Head
of Products at TradersCockpit.com.)
(Image: www.pareshsharma.in)
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