Historical stock market prices
Stocks are trades in shares. Although most people have some idea of what a share is, here are a few basics for those who may be somewhat unclear as to what you are buying or selling when you trade in shares. When you buy or sell a companys stock, you buy it in amounts for units called shares.
A share is a part ownership in the company. The price of a share is quoted in dollars per share. So, if we hypothetically want to buy one share of a $20 stock, we have to spend $20.
But shares are almost never bought in such small amounts. A lot, which is 100 shares of a stock, is the normal minimum amount of shares to buy. You might not want to buy them until you know exactly what they are. Sometimes, the management of a company decides that it would be more profitable for the company if the public were to own parts of it rather than having just a few people own the whole thing. When they make this decision and sell shares in their company to whomever wishes to buy them, the company is said to be going public. If your shares increase in value, you make money.
Every time you buy a share, you are buying a piece of ownership in a company. At different times, people will want different amounts of these shares. For example, if the company begins to make large amounts of money, this may cause people to want more shares of the company. The supply of these shares being sold by owners, combined with the demand that buyers have for these shares determines the value, or price, of each share.
Not all shares are equal. Each company decides on its own how much stock to offer to the public. If a company decides to offer only 1000 shares of stock to the public, each one of those shares should theoretically be worth a very large amount, assuming that the company has monetary value and that people want to own parts of that company.
When companies go public, they usually offer millions of shares. The price of shares can be affected by the number of shares issued, because of the laws of supply and demand. Sometimes, a company that is already public decides to issue new stock in order to raise capital, each share sold gives the company additional money. When this happens, the price of the stock should go down, because now there are more shares. Unless demand for the shares goes up, the price will decline.
Price charts :
Approach to the stock market, can be an expensive proposition. Perhaps your destination is somewhere you have never been before. You do not just get in and go; you bring along a set of directions or a road map. In the stock market, price charts are a lot like road maps. Charts tell you where stocks have been, and with the right tools, they can help you figure out where a stock is going.
Price charts are graphs on which the historical prices of a stock are plotted. Stock charts show different periods of time, and can be plotted in different ways. Some common forms of price charts are daily charts, which show a price bar for every day; weekly charts; monthly charts; and intra-day charts, which show the movement of a stock price within the span of one day, these charts often use three- or five-minute bars.
Timing indicators :
A timing indicator is also known as a timing signal. Investors use timing signals and indicators as strategies and alerts so they will know when a stock should be bought or sold. The accuracy or effectiveness of a timing signal is a function of the underlying validity of the idea on which the indicator is based."> If the timing signal you decide to use is based on a completely arbitrary idea, such as how many times a day you stop at stop lights, your timing signal will be less effective than if it is based on something that has to do with stock price or volume fluctuations.
Timing indicator is to buy a stock every time it goes down a certain number of points from the previous daily closing price, then the results of what we do is to function of how well this strategy works. There are literally thousands of ideas on which timing indicators and signals are based. Traders and investors use timing indicators in order to increase their probability of success in the stock market.
