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  • October 26, 2010

    Stock Markets Of The World

    Author: Admin - Categories: Stock News

    “Stock Market” is a term that is used to refer both to the physical location for buying and selling stocks, and to the overall activity of the market within a certain country. When you hear “The stock market was down today,” it refers to the combined activity of many stock exchanges.

    The major exchanges in the US are the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the American Stock Exchange (Amex), and NASDAQ.

    The correct term for the physical location for trading stocks is the “Stock Exchange.” A country may have many different stock exchanges. Usually a particular company’s stocks are traded on only 1 exchange, although large corporations may be listed in several.

    Investing Around The World

    There are stock exchanges located throughout the world, and it is possible to buy or sell stocks on any of them. The only restriction is the oparating hours of each exchange. Both the NYSE and NASDAQ, for example, operate from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm Eastern Time, Monday through Friday.

    Other exchanges have similar opening hours based on their local time. When you trade on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, your order will be executed sometime between 9:30 pm and 4:00 am New York time.

    The locations of the major stock exchanges of the world are:

    Japan (Tokyo Stock Exchange)
    India (Bombay Stock Exchange)
    Europe (London Stock Exchange, Frankfurt Stock Exchange, SWX Swiss Exchange)
    the People’s Republic of China (Shanghai Stock Exchange)
    United States.

    Stock Market Fluctuations

    The economic health of a country will strongly influence its stock market. When the economy is doing well the market is bullish. Bull markets occur during times of high economic production, low unemployment and low inflation. Bear markets, on the other hand, follow downturns in the economy. When inflation and unemployment are rising, stock prices are usually falling.

    Stock price fluctuations are also driven by supply and demand, which in turn are dependent to a great degree on investor psychology. Seeing a stock price rise rapidly can cause investors to jump on the bandwagon, and this rush to buy drives the price up even faster. A falling price can have a similar effect in the other direction. These are short-term fluctuations. Stock prices tend to normalize after such runs.

    The stock exchange is only 1 of many opportunities for people to invest. Other popular markets include the Foreign Exchange Market (FOREX), the Futures Market, and the Options Market.

    FOREX: World’s Largest Market

    The FOREX is the biggest (in terms of value) investment market in the world. FOREX traders buy 1 currency against another and can profit from small changes in currency value. Most FOREX trades are entered and exited in 1 24-hour span, and traders have to keep a close watch on the market in order to make profitable trades.

    The Futures Market

    The Futures Market is a market of contracts to buy and sell certain goods at specified prices and times. It exists because buyers and sellers of goods wish to lock in prices for future delivery, but market conditions can make the actual futures contract fluctuate considerably in value.

    Most investors in the futures market are not interested in the actual goods — only in the profit that can be realized from trading the contracts.

    The Options Market

    The Options Market is similar to the Futures Market in that an option is a contract that gives you the right (but not the obligation) to trade a stock at a certain price before a specified date. These options can be traded on their own or purchased as a form of insurance against price fluctuations within a certain time frame.

    Stocks: Low Risk, Long-Term

    All 3 of these markets are considered quite risky without considerable knowledge and experience. They also require close monitoring of market movements. Stocks, on the other hand, are less risky because movements of the market are usually more gradual. Although short-term investment strategies are possible, most people view stocks as long-term investments.

    June 29, 2010

    Mumbai Stock Exchange – Analysing the BSE Sensex Trends

    Author: Admin - Categories: Stock News

    The BSE Sensex is the index of shares listed on the Mumbai Stock Exchange (BSE) and learning how to recognise the trends in the index can yield valuable information about when to buy, when to hold and when to sell, the three main pieces of information needed by every Indian stock market investor.

    The performance and trending of the BSE Sensex index of the Mumbai Stock Exchange (Bombay Stock Exchange) is uploaded every day to www.sharesdaily.in where you

    will see a number of metrics, the first being the percentage rate of change over the past 1, 5, 10, 60 and 250 trading days.

    One often sees the words “short term”, “medium term” and “long term” used in the financial media without any actual
    definitions. The sharesdaily.in analysis metric defines them thus:

    Short term is the market trend over the past ten trading days.

    Medium term is the market trend over the past sixty trading days.

    Long term is the market trend over the past two hundred and fifty trading days.

    From this you can see that it is possible to have the market rising in the short term but falling in the medium term, etc.

    When all three terms are showing positive numbers, the market trend is very strong in that direction, be it up or down.

    In addition to the previous trends, the percentage rate of change of the previous trading day is displayed plus the movement over the past week of five trading days.

    The other valuable metric is the Volatility Barometer, this measures the trading range over the past ten trading days. If the volatility is falling then the market is more stable,

    if it is rising then the market is becoming more unstable. An actual numerical readout will be installed in the future.

    The ideal condition for investors is to have the short, medium and long term trends in positive numbers and to have the volatility decreasing. Here you have both gain and stability. This applies to the market index and not to every individual stock.

    Always remember that this all can be overruled by sudden unpredictable negative events so have your exit strategy and stop losses in place. More about this in future
    articles.