The Stock Exchange Demystified (2024)

The Stock Exchange Demystified (1)Antony Mueller

November 26, 2018 Reading Time: 5 minutes

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The Stock Exchange Demystified (3)

The stock market is a central institution of capitalism. Companies go public in order to raise capital for their expansion. Economic growth consists in the enlargement of business profitability. The income that firms generate is the basis of expenditure for private consumption and government. How profitable are companies determines the returns of other investment vehicles, including bonds or real estate.

There is an indissoluble link between capitalism and the stock market. Over the long run, stocks will rise when capitalism flourishes and fall when the entrepreneurial spirit wilts. Therefore, a crash is not to blame on the stock market but on the erosion of capitalism that has preceded the collapse.

Function

Exchanges are markets where supply meets demand and where price formation takes place. A specific stock market price says that at a certain point in time and space, purchases and sales took place at this definite price. The “stock market value” of a company does not represent the value of this company. As a price, the stock market valuation of an asset fluctuates with the trades at the stock exchange.

The stock market is not a predictor of the future. Nobody knows the future, and financial market operators are no exception. The fluctuations of stock market price quotations reflect current expectations about profits. Small changes of these anticipations can have profound effects on stock prices because the time horizon of investors extends over many periods.

The stock exchange has an anchor in companies’ profits. To distribute dividends, a company must generate earnings. The main determinant of the price of a company’s stock is its profit position relative to that of alternative investments. Therefore, the current price of a share depends not only on the individual company but also on the risk environment and the earnings of other companies and on the potential income and uncertainties of other investment vehicles.

As an owner of shares, an investor is at the origin of wealth creation in the capitalist economy. Other forms of income depend on the wealth that the corporate world creates. Employment income arises from and through the profits of companies. For banks to pay interest on savings, they must generate income by granting loans to companies and consumers. Earnings from bonds also derive from the wealth companies create.

For the state to pay interest on its bonds, it must collect tax receipts, which depend on profits, wages, and sales. Government expenditure depends on incomes in the private sector. When businesses fail, everything else in the economy also falls to pieces. Those investors who fear stock market crashes and panics and seek refuge in other investment vehicles cannot avoid losses when the political and social environment falls into chaos.

Trading

A stock market is a trading place. There are markets for commodities, foreign exchange, bonds, stocks, and their derivatives. If supply is tight, and demand increases, prices will rise. When demand falls and supply increases, prices drop. Sometimes the market is “thin” because only light trading is going on. Under such a condition, some market participants’ urgent need for cash can cause strong price cuts. This day-to-day trading is unpredictable.

Of the total amount of existing stocks, bonds, and commodities, only a small part trades in a session. It is therefore misleading to take the daily stock market quotations at face value to determine the “value” of the entire company, as is the case, for example, when one calculates the so-called capitalization of companies. This figure is already obsolete when the results get published. According to the individual needs of stockholders for cash, the market quotations change even if nothing remarkable happens in the economy or with the company that the share represents.

Intense observation of the price quotations is useful when one wants to buy or to sell and is on the lookout for good timing. The momentary quotations are important for market professionals, yet for the investor, the short-term fluctuations are of little significance. What counts is being in the market and earning a dividend in the long run. The dividends of stocks and the interest payments of bonds are the sources of income for the capitalist, unlike the speculator who wants to profit from the price changes and the market professional who lives off the trades.

Price Determination

There is a debate in finance about the determinants of stock market prices. The dispute rages between representatives of the efficient market hypothesis and the behavioral theorists.

The adherents of the efficient market hypothesis claim that the stock price itself is the best expression of the present value as it reflects the state of obtainable information. Only new information changes the price. Therefore, stock market prices move at a random walk as information comes in. As an argument against the efficiency hypothesis, one can holdthat the market is not perfect since people are not perfect and markets are no more and no less “information-efficient” than human beings. It is not the information that makes the price, but the human decision to buy or to sell according to the individual evaluation of the information.

At the other extreme, the behavioral theory of asset markets is wrong because it tries to explain human action in light of a psychology of irrationality. Yet what may seem irrational to the observer may not be irrational for the actors themselves. Extreme fluctuations in the prices are not irrational — for example, when the market is narrow and when the participants change their views about how to assess the future profitability of a company.

Bubbles and Crashes

Long periods of a bull market (rising prices) or a bear market (falling prices) result from the flow of funds — whether more money flows into the stock market or out of the market. These inflows and outflows reflect the amount of money that circulates in the economy and the returns and risks of investment alternatives. While the relative prices of stocks reflect the profit expectations for individual stocks, the overall financial liquidity in the economy determines the level of stock prices.

Stock market booms tend to become bubbles when central banks flood the economy with fresh money when the real economy offers few attractive alternative investments. A bear market happens when financial liquidity shrinks. Then there is a general lack of money or money remains outside of the stock exchange to finance business transactions by other means. If securities owners want to sell with urgency in such a situation, they can do so only at lower prices.

Since the 1980s, there has been a strong expansion of the financial sector. The growth of finance, or what some call casino capitalism, has its cause in the growth of the public debt and in monetary inflation. When the growth of government debt and of the money supply reach their limits, the share of the financial sector will decline and the price levels of securities will normalize.

Conclusion

The price of an individual share and the status of the securities market represented in its index result from the prices of all potential investments in the financial markets and their embeddedness in the national and global environment. Therefore, it is impossible to systematically predict the movements of individual shares or the stock market index. Yet such forecasts are also unnecessary because the main advantage of investing in stocks is to participate in the growth of the economy and to maintain at the same time high liquidity.

Unlike real estate, for example, stocks can be converted into cash quickly and in small or large quantities on the stock exchange. In this respect, stock market investment is unique and provides advantages over other kinds of investment.

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Antony Mueller

The Stock Exchange Demystified (5)

Antony P. Mueller is a professor of economics at the Federal University UFS in Brazil where he is also a researcher at the Center of Applied Economics, and Senior Fellow of the American Institute for Economic Research. Antony Mueller earned his doctorate in economics summa cum laude from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany. He was a Fulbright Scholar in the United States and a visiting professor at the Universidad Francisco Marroquin (UFM) in Guatemala as well as a member of the German academic exchange program DAAD. Antony Mueller has recently published the book “Beyond the State and Politics. Capitalism for the New Millennium”.

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FAQs

What is stock exchange question answer? ›

Stock Exchange is a place where securities are traded (bought and sold) according to specific rules and regulations. These rules are formulated by regulatory bodies which oversee the trading activities in stock exchanges. The securities traded in stock markets are shares, debentures and corporate bonds.

What is the stock exchange in your own words? ›

In other words, a stock exchange is a forum where securities like bonds and stocks are purchased and traded. This can be both an online trading platform and offline (physical location).

What is a metaphor for the stock market? ›

The stock market goes up like an escalator and down like an elevator. The point is the rises are often over a longer period and more gradual where the drops can cover a great distance very quickly.

Is the stock market perfectly efficient? ›

The Bottom Line

It's safe to say the market is not going to achieve perfect efficiency anytime soon. For greater efficiency to occur, all of these things must happen: Universal access to high-speed and advanced systems of pricing analysis. A universally accepted analysis system of pricing stocks.

What is stock exchange summary? ›

A stock exchange is a market where stock buyers connect with stock sellers. Shares are traded daily on exchanges such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the Nasdaq. Stocks may be traded through a broker following financial regulations to deal with exchanges and the companies that trade.

What is a stock market exchange group of answer choices? ›

A stock exchange is simply a marketplace where traders buy and sell stocks. (Some other types of investments—like exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and notes (ETNs)—are also traded on stock exchanges.) Some exchanges have physical locations—for example, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) located on Wall Street in Manhattan.

What is the stock market also known as the ___? ›

The secondary market is also known as the stock market or stock exchange, which is the market for the purchase and sale of existing securities. In secondary market, securities are not directly issued by the company to investors. The securities are sold by existing investors to other investors.

What is the slang for holding a stock? ›

HODL - Slang for "hold your position" and resist the urge to sell your holdings. Hold the Line - A battle cry for users during volatility in the markets. When stocks favored by the forum began to drop, appeals to “hold the line” became common.

What does the stock quote tell you? ›

A stock quote is the price of a stock as quoted on an exchange. A basic quote for a specific stock provides information, such as its bid and ask price, last traded price, and volume traded.

What is a real life example of EMH? ›

Several studies and real-world examples support the EMH. For instance, the random walk theory, which suggests that stock price changes are random and unpredictable, aligns with the EMH. The rise of index funds and passive investing strategies is also often cited as evidence of market efficiency.

What is an example of EMH? ›

The efficient market hypothesis also ignores the impact of sentiment on valuations and prices. For example, there's no question that bubbles exist in the stock market and other asset classes. Well-known examples are the dot-com bubble, the real estate bubble of the mid-2000s, and the recent cryptocurrency bubble.

Is the stock market really unpredictable? ›

"One of the most powerful lessons from studying 234 years of U.S. financial history is that market crashes are highly unpredictable," says Mark J. Higgins, senior vice president at Index Fund Advisors in Portland, Oregon.

What is a stock exchange quizlet? ›

Stock Exchange. it is a place where stocks are bought and sold. This is known as trading stocks. A stock exchange can be a real, physical location (the building where trading takes place), but it can also be more of an idea, too.

What is the stock exchange an example of? ›

The stock exchange is an example of the capital market. The capital market is a market for long-term financial instruments such as stocks, bonds, and other securities.

What is a stock exchange in agriculture? ›

MEANING OF STOCK EXCHANGE

Stock exchange is an act whereby stock and shares are publicly bought and sold. Agriculture in stock exchange can therefore the expressed as the action of giving. available agricultural produce or products (stock) in return for other items of equal. value to the produce or products.

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