Investment Seminar Notes
By Eric Ewanco
In February 2007, a friend who respected my investment knowledge asked me
for help with notes for a seminar he was planning on giving to some people from
his church. Well, one thing led to another and I ended up with enough notes to
do virtually a complete talk.
I decided to post the rough notes on the Internet in the hopes that someone
else might benefit from them. (If you ever use these for your own talk or
seminar, I'd love to know, drop me a line at
).
NOTE: These notes are simplified for a beginner audience and the
definitions are intended to be easier to understand rather than academically
rigorous. I'm sure someone could pick nits with them. If there are any
significant errors let me know but otherwise it's not worth it.
- What is stock? (represents a share of ownership in a publically
traded company; investors pay the company for stock, which allows the
company funds to get started or grow, and in return they take ownership
of the company)
- What is the stock market? (the market where stock is bought and
sold or "traded")
- What is a stock exchange? (A place or system that facilitates
trading shares of stock between buyers and sellers.)
- What is capital? Capital in general is "accumulated goods
devoted to the production of other goods *:* facilities or goods
utilized as factors of production" (Merriam Webster's). Stock is
considered "capital" because it represents an investment that enables
the company to do business.
- What is the most important principle of investing? BUY LOW, SELL
HIGH! The difference between the price you buy stock for and the price
you sell it for is your profit (or capital gain). Your goal is to make
a profit!
- How are stocks identified? With a "ticker symbol" of one to four
letters. (Comes from the days when stock prices were broadcast on a
machine that made a ticking noise as it printed prices on a paper
tape.) Biggest stocks have one letter symbols, e.g. "T' (AT&T).
Higher-end stocks have two or three letters. More average stocks have
four. A European stock exchange is called a "bourse" (BUHRS)
- What are the U.S. stock exchanges?
- New York Stock Exchange (NYSE): Biggest and oldest, until
recently still conducted trades by humans getting into a pit and
yelling at each other
- NASDAQ: Upstart exchange, first in U.S. to go
all electronic, now #2. Originally stood for National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotations system and that it was the
world's first electronic stock market.
- What is OTC or Over the Counter? (This is a form of trading
that happens direct between parties rather than on a stock exchange.
There is a service called the OTC Bulletin Board, that provides
quotation and last-sale information to facilitate over the counter
trades. Stocks which appear on the Bulletin Board, indicated by a
".BB" suffix to their symbol, are generally not valuable or viable
enough to trade on NASDAQ. Think of trading by posting to a bulletin
board. Riskier, but still fairly safe if you are careful.)
- What is the Pink Sheets? (Stocks on the Pink Sheets are the
riskiest, most dubious stocks. These are the bottom-dwellers of
stocks. Like the OTC BB, Pink Sheets is a quotation service, not an
exchange. They can trade on the OTC Bulletin Board but Pink Sheets is
run by an separate company. Avoid these stocks until you really know
what you are doing and understand they are the riskiest stocks you can
buy. Ticker symbol ends in ".P" or ".PK".
- American Stock Exchange (AMEX): Long time #2, focuses on small
stocks and exchange-traded funds
- How is stock priced? (In shares, varying from a few cents to
thousands of dollars, to the hundreds of a cent. Getting the price of
a share of a given stock is called getting a "stock quote".)
- Why are free stock quotes often delayed? (Free stock quotes are
delayed 15 or 20 minutes so that they can sell real-time quote features
to people! Usually individuals can get real-time quotes from their
brokers at no cost.)
- How are shares of stock traded? (Through a stock broker or
broker, to whom you pay a commission. There are two types of broker: A
full-service broker, e.g. Merrill Lynch, who offers advice and often
solicits you to buy stocks, and a discount broker, such as Charles
Schwab, who merely executes trades you request and doesn't get involved
in the question of what you want to trade. Obviously, full-service
brokers are pricier.)
- Shares can usually be traded in any quantity, but traditionally
are
sold in blocks of 100 shares, some restrictions may apply if you don't
use a "round lot" of 100 shares
- What are the normal hours for trading? (Trading hours are 9:30am
to 4:00pm M-F.)
- Can I trade after hours? (Yes, under restricted conditions.
Extended hours are 8am to 9:15am and 4:15pm to 8pm.)
- Warning: The price of a stock at market close is not necessarily
the same as the price at market open the next day. If something
happens overnight, for example announcement of very bad news or very
good news, the stock price may jump significantly.
- How does stock ownership work? (briefly) (investors have a right
to vote on board of directors and other issues facing the company, also
have right to company's assets should they liquidate)
- Can you own fractional shares of a stock? (In general, you can
only trade whole shares of stock. In fact, when a split occurs that
would result in fractional shares of a stock, you are given "cash in
lieu" for the fractional shares. However, in some dividend
reinvestment programs, you can acquire fractional shares of stock. A dividend
reinvestment program is a program where dividends are automatically
used to buy new shares of stock. This is useful because when a
dividend is issued, the value of the stock goes down by the amount of
the dividend, thus reinvestment preserves your original capital. Also,
mutual funds operate using fractional shares.)
- What represents stock ownership? (Stock ownership is represented
by an official stock certificate. It is like a title to your stock.
This is not often issued, however. Usually your broker holds your
shares on your behalf; also, typically today, stock ownership is also
maintained in a central database, so if you lose your stock
certificate, with some effort it is replaceable.)
- What is a position? (To have a position in a stock is to either
own it or owe it (in the case of a short position).)
- What are "bid" and "ask"? ("Bid" is the highest price a buyer is
willing to pay for a share. The "ask" is the lowest price the seller
is willing to sell. The difference is the "spread" and constitutes a
profit made by the market maker.
- What is a stock's market capitalization or market cap?
(The number of shares issued to investors times the market price of the
stock. It represents the total market value of a stock and is used in
comparisons. You cannot compare the share price of two stocks; a stock
that is $50 a share is not necessarily more valuable than one at $5 a
share. You have to compare the market cap of the two stocks.)
- [Advanced topic] What is an option? (An option is a contract to
buy or sell a particular stock at a specific price and time. It is
essentially a bet that a stock
will be above or below a particular price (called a strike price) at a
particular
time. Say I have 100 shares of Pfizer. I can write an option that
allows someone to buy my 100 shares of Pfizer in June at $30 a share.
If someone buys that option, and the price hits $30 before it expires
in June, they have a right to buy my shares for $30 a share. Therefore
if say it hits $35, I lose $500 (($35 - $30) * 100). If it doesn't
reach $30, my shares are safe and I pocket the price of the option.
Options are only offered for specific dates and specific prices; I
cannot sell an option for June 16th at $31.55, for example. Each
option covers 100
shares of stock. An option
you write to offer to sell stock you own to a buyer should they so
choose is called a call; an option you write to agree to buy stock from
someone else should they so choose is called a put. An call option
that someone holds where the strike price is below the market price, or
a put option that someone holds where the strike price is above the
market price, is said to be "in the money", i.e., it makes money for
the option holder. A call option is either covered or uncovered (or
"naked"); if I have the stock to sell, it is covered. If I have to buy
the stock to cover the option should it be exercised, potentially
making a loss, it is uncovered. Naturally brokers put restrictions on
whether you can write uncovered options.)
- What is equity? (Equity can mean a few things. It can mean the
amount you have invested in a particular investment, such as your
house, I have $100k in equity in my home. It is also a synonym for
stock, usually used in the plural, e.g., I rely on equities for my
income.)
- What is a bond? (a loan to a company for a fixed term at a fixed
interest rate that can be traded on a market, pays regular interest)
- How does a bond's price behave? (It is inversely proportional to
the prevailing interest rates; if currently issued bonds go up in
interest rate, it devalues existing bonds, since the rate of a bond is
fixed throughout its life)
- There are two distinct aspects to the value of a bond
that are important remember. One is the interest rate it pays, called
its "yield". If you hold on to a bond, you will be paid, assuming the
company is around, fixed interest on the bond at regular intervals,
until the end of its term (its "maturity"). Obviously that is
valuable. Second is the value of the bond should you choose to sell
it. You can make a profit off of this as well, as with a stock, by the
difference between the price you bought it at and the price you sold it
at.
- What is a junk bond? (A high yield [that
is, high interest-rate] bond -- high yield to attract investors due to
unstable nature of company.)
- What is an investment grade bond? (This is a bond carrying an
average degree of risk, in contrast with a junk bond.)
- What is a mutual fund? (A mutual fund is a pool of
assets used to buy a combination of stocks, bonds, or other securities
managed by a professional investment advisor. Suppose you were good at
investing, so all your friends decided to give you their money, which
you then used to buy stocks you felt in your best judgment were
valuable. Mutual funds provide economies of scale and cost less to
operate than buying individual stocks. They are also more diversified
than buying individual stocks. Diversification is when you invest in
many stocks, bonds, and other instruments to lower your exposure to
risk; think of not putting your eggs in one basket. Mutual funds are
available for nearly every investment goal under the sun. However, be
aware that mutual funds have hidden costs. A mutual fund trade
generally does not incur a commission, but it may incur a fee known as
a load. Some mutual funds penalize you for early redemption; they are
meant as long-term investments, not for trading. Mutual funds
can be bought and sold only once a day, at the end, of trading, and the
price cannot be predicted exactly.)
- [Advanced topic] What is an American Depositary Receipt? (This
trades like a
stock, except that the capital represented by the depositary receipt is
invested in some other security, typically a foreign stock [in order to
make it easier to trade in the U.S.])
- What is an exchange-traded fund? (This is similar to both a
Depositary Receipt and a mutual fund in that it has a fixed investment
in some number of securities and based on that value trades on an
exchange like a stock. Unlike a regular or open-ended mutual fund, it
can trade at any time during the trading day.)
- What is Net Asset Value (NAV)? (This is the value per share of a
fund: the total assets of the fund divided by the
outstanding shares.)
- What is a money market fund? This is a fund that invests in very
short-term, low-risk securities [come up with good examples maybe]. It
adjusts itself to maintain a NAV of $1/share and acts like a cash
equivalent. This is where you park your cash when you aren't using it
and want a return but need to have it quickly available. Practically
speaking, it's virtually impossible to lose money in a money market
fund.
- Bonds are considered conservative, low-risk investments. Stocks
are considered more speculative, higher-risk. Invest in bonds if you
need the money in the short term. Stocks are appropriate for longer
term investments. Money market funds are lowest risk.
- What is the second most important principle of investing? (The
higher the risk, the higher your return [i.e. profit]; the lower the
risk, the lower your return. There is no easy way to make big bucks in
the stock market. If you want to earn a bigger profit, you have to
take bigger risks.)
- How much money am I making on my stock? (When a stock rises $1 in
price, you make on paper $1 per share. If you were then to sell that
stock, you would realize a capital gain of that same amount, minus
commission.)
- What is the settlement period? (When you sell a stock, the buyer
has three business days to convey the funds. Your proceeds will not be
100% available for three days after a sale.)
- What is a penny stock? (A penny stock is a stock that trades
under $5 a share. Generally they have lower capitalization and are
riskier investments. Brokers may impose restrictions on on trading
penny stocks, especially on margin.)
- What is a security? (Merriam-Webster: "a written obligation,
evidence, or document of ownership or
creditorship (as a stock, bond, note, debenture, or certificate) giving
the holder the right to demand and receive property not in his
possession." Generic term for various instruments of value in the
investment world.)
- What is a prospectus? (A prospectus is a document your broker is
required to give you by law before you invest that explains what a
company does, what its balance sheet is like, what risks it has, and so
forth.)
- What is an annual report? (A publication that by law the company
must issue yearly to every shareholder, describing the company's
financials for the year.)
- Explain supply and demand and its impact on prices
- How to place a trade: Market order: You will get whatever the
prevailing price is, and will execute the order immediately. Limit
order: You specify a price; the order will not be executed below that
price (if a sell order) or above that price (if a buy order). Stop
order: Does not execute until the price falls below a certain point
(sell) or rises above a certain point (buy). For a limit order, you
can also specify a stop price, which will trigger a limit order when
the price hits the stop. You can also specify whether it is a day
order, which will be cancelled if not executed by the end of the
trading day, or a "Good Til Cancelled" order, which despite the name
expires in 30 days.
- Trades may be executed partially, especially if they are limit
orders, unless you specify All Or None.
- What does it mean to be marketable? (For a limit order, this
means that the market bid price exceeds the limit price for a sell, or
the market ask price falls below the limit price for a buy. For a
stock, it means there are buyers for the stock. A stock no one wants
is not marketable.)
- Indexes or Averages -- these are numbers representing the overall
value of a given collection of stocks. They are gauges of market value.
- What is the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)? This is a
ubiquitous index with importance far beyond reality. It is one of
several averages the Dow Jones company (publishers of the Wall Street
Journal, not to be confused with Dow Chemical) created many years ago
as a barometer for the market. It covers industry (as opposed to the
Dow Jones Transportation Average, for example), although today it's
more broader based than it used to be. It is based on a weighted
average of a small handful of companies considered to be important to
the economy. It is weighted so that when companies are added or
subtracted, as they must be from time to time, the results don't
artificially change and can be meaningfully compared with previous
averages. Despite its overwhelming popularity as a stock market metric
the DJIA does not fairly represent the market at large.
- What is the S&P 500? The Standard and Poor's 500 (Standard
and Poors is a company that compiles investment data) is a price
average of the top 500 stocks by market capitalization, that is, the
500 most valuable companies in the U.S. markets. This is a much better
measure of the value of the stock market than the DJIA.
- What is the Russell 2000? This is a popular index of 2000
small stocks.
- What is the Wilshire 5000? This is an index of nearly every
publicly-traded stock.
- Asset classes, or types of stocks:
- Growth: Moderately risky, aggressive returns (i.e. increase in
value) -- up and coming companies. Good when you are several years
away
from needing the money.
- Value: Stocks that haven't done so well lately and may be
poised for a comeback. Often older stocks.
- Income or Fixed-Income: Fairly staid low-risk stocks that pay a
steady dividend (retirees like these)
- Large Cap: (Large Capitalization) As it says, stocks with a
large capitalization, bigger stocks
- Small Cap: Like it says
- Mid Cap: Between large and small cap
- Emerging markets: Stocks doing business in industrializing or
emerging regions of the world.
- What is a "rally"? (This is when a stock rises in a sustained
fashion, often used when a stock is recovering from a dip.)
- What is a "dead cat bounce"? (This is when a stock appears
briefly to recover after a precipitous fall, just as a cat might appear
to be alive because it moves after it hits the ground at high speed.)
- What is margin? (Margin is when you borrow cash against stock,
typically in order to buy it. For an eligible stock, if you qualify you
can borrow up to 50% of its value, so, for example, if your stock cost
$500, you could pony up $250 in cash and buy it. If it goes down,
however, you will get a "margin call", and will have to pony up more
money. If you don't do so in time, they will liquidate (i.e. sell)
your stock to pay the debt off. As you might imagine, when there is a
bursting market bubble, there is a lot of carnage. You can also use
margin to pay off your bills.)
- What is selling short? (it is possible to sell stock
you do not own. In this case, you borrow it from someone else and pay
interest. Selling short is what you do when you want to bet a
company's stock price will fall in the very near term. When the stock
falls (or you get a margin call), you place a buy order to cover
your position.)
- What does it mean to be long or short? (To be
short a stock, as explained in selling short, means to borrow
shares of a stock so you can sell it. The opposite is to be long a
stock: to own actual shares of the stock. You might say, "Are you
long on Ford?")
- Who is the SEC? (The Security and Exchange Commission is the
government agency that regulates investment activity.)
- Who is the SIPC? (The Securities Investor Protection
Corporation. It is a federally mandated non-profit corporation that
insures consumer investment accounts in case the brokerage goes
bankrupt. While in many ways it is analogous to the FDIC, FSLIC, and
other agencies that insure bank accounts, it is critical to remember
that the SIPC does not protect you from losing money if your securities
go down or bankrupt, it rather protects you should your broker screw up
or mismanage your securities.)
- Explain tax liabilities, different tax brackets, important things
to do (keep track of your basis), explain what "basis" is :-)
- What is a Public Offering? (This is when shares are offered for
sale by the company to the public. This is the only time the company
gets capital in exchange for shares of stock; after the public
offering, shares are traded between investors and the company is not
involved [except to track the owners of the shares]. A company can do
this multiple times.)
- What is an Initial Public Offering (IPO)? (This is the first time
shares are sold to the public, when a company first gets on the stock
exchange and starts trading publicly.)
- What is a dividend? (A dividend is a cash premium paid, usually
on a quarterly basis, to stockholders on a per-share basis. Companies
offer dividends to attract stockholders; they forgo dividends to invest
in growing the company.)
- [Advanced topic]
What does it mean to go "ex-dividend"? (This is the cut-off date for
owners to receive a dividend. If you buy
the stock on or after this date, you will not receive that particular
dividend distribution, but you will receive a corresponding discount in
the price of the stock.)
- [Advanced topic] What is volatility? (A stock's volatility is
governed by how rapidly and unexpectedly it moves up and down.)
- What is volume? (Volume is the number of shares that are traded
on a given day, whether of one stock or across the whole market. High
volume obviously indicates high interest in the stock and will happen
when something hits the news or even if something behind-the-scenes is
happening.)
- What is a stock split? (A stock split is when a stock needs, for
various reasons, to adjust its price by some ratio. Two for one is a
typical split. The price is cut in half, and in return shareholder's
shares are doubled, so the total value remains the same. For example,
Google might choose to split their stock because at several hundred
dollars a share, it makes it difficult for the average investor to
trade in it. Reverse splits are possible, too; they are done to make
the price more attractive to investors, to avoid the "penny stock"
label, or to remain listed on exchanges that have minimum share price
requirements. Generally stocks that do reverse splits are struggling.)
- What is a "trader"? (A trader is someone who actually conducts
the trade on behalf of the buyer and the seller. Today, due to
electronic trading, traders are more removed from the transaction but
there is still a need for traders to oversee the market. "Trader" can
also refer to someone who buys and sells stock in the hope of make a
very short term profit due to variations in the stock price over
seconds or weeks; such a person who attempts to make a living out of
exploiting hour by hour fluctuations is called a "day trader".)
- [Advanced topic] What is a "market maker"? (A market maker
is a person or
a firm
who quotes both a buy and a sell price in a financial instrument or commodity,
hoping to make a profit on the turn or the bid/offer spread.)
- [Advanced topic] What is the float of a stock? (The float is the
portion of outstanding shares that are not held by people who won't
sell (typically founders with large positions) and do not have
restrictions on being sold (typically employees). In other words, the
float is what is free to trade on exchanges.).
- [Advanced topic] What is the difference between fundamental
analysis and technical analysis? (These terms describe two different
approaches to choosing what stocks to invest in. Fundamental
analysis refers to choosing stocks that have good fundamentals,
such as profit, market share, industry outlook, product viability, and
other economic factors. Technical analysis, also called charting,
refers to choosing stocks based on patterns in stock data. For
example, one may note that a stock jumps fairly reliably every January.)
- [Advanced topic] What is momentum investing? (This might be
called the "lemming effect". When people invest because everyone else
is investing, it generates a self-sustaining [for a time] rise in
price.)
- What is a "buy and hold" investment strategy verses "market
timing"? What is "dollar cost averaging"? ("Buy and hold", as the
name implies, means that you are in for the long term; you accumulate
stock over time relying on the fact that for many companies, the stock
price, overall, tends to go up with time. The buy and hold strategy
takes advantage of something called dollar cost averaging. With dollar
cost averaging, you buy regularly using fixed sums. When the stock is
down, you get more shares for your money, giving you a boost when the
stock goes up. You don't worry too much about temporary fluctuations or
predicting brief downturns; you just persevere. It's a very effective
way to make money over time. It's the best choice for people who just
want their money to grow and don't have time to get deeply involved.
It works best with mutual funds. Obviously, though, some stocks will
hit a terminal dive at some point, and you need to watch for that and
sell as necessary. With market timing, you focus on predicting which
way the stock will go, buying on the rises while selling before
predicted downturns. You actively try to "beat the market". While you
might enjoy the adrenaline rush, you are unlikely to succeed with this
strategy for a sustained period and you will be socked with commission
fees. Stick with buy and hold.)
- [Advanced topic] What is liquidity? (Liquidity is the ease with
which a security or other asset can be sold without significantly
affecting its price. At the top of the liquidity ranking is cash; cash
is always able to buy something. Real estate is at the bottom; it
takes a lot of time and effort to sell a piece of real estate and the
process in some cases can take years. [Use Ann Arbor real estate
market as an example.] Various factors affect the liquidity of a
stock. Obvious a stock with high volume is also very liquid; there are
many buyers.
- What is the third fundamental principle of investing? (Past
performance is no indicator of future results. This is a tempting
pitfall; a stock has been going up for months, and it is natural to
assume it will continue to go up. A mutual fund makes an impressive
profit one year, it is natural to assume it will the next year. Don't
make this assumption.)
- Go through a detailed example of how you would go about buying a
stock.
- Come up with a candidate: maybe a company with technology you
find interesting, maybe something recommended by your brother-in-law,
maybe something you've heard about in the news. Determine its stock
symbol.
- Research the candidate: historical stock price, highs, lows,
press releases, analyst recommendations, products, markets, industry,
competitors, etc.
- Get a prospectus
- Find a broker and open a brokerage account, if you don't have
one
- Deposit funds.
- When you want to buy, remember the principle to buy low and
sell high. Choose a time when the stock is a little on the downside.
You can use a limit order to help you.
- Decide how many shares of stock you want to buy. Use round
lots of 100 if possible.
- Watch your total sum -- commission will be added to your order.
- Decide if you want dividends reinvested (if applicable).
- Decide on a limit order or market order. Ordinarily you would
choose market. If you want to limit the price you pay, at the expense
of waiting a bit, determine what your limit price is and place a limit
order. Don't get too greedy though -- your order may never execute.
- If placing a limit order, decide on a day order or Good Til
Cancelled order. If the latter case, be careful you don't forget about
the order and move the money out of the account!
- Place the order. Market orders execute in seconds.
- Wait for the confirmation. Typically brokers will send you a
written confirmation of the order.
- Do anatomy of a stock quote, go to Yahoo or whatever and explain
all the fields
- [Advanced topic] What is the difference between common stock and
preferred stock? (Common stock is what your average investor buys.
Typically it has voting rights that preferred stock does not.
Preferred stock comes with extra rights, chief of which is preference
in dividends and in liquidation. Since stockholders own the company,
when it liquidates, any assets go first to preferred stockholders, and
nearly last to common stockholders.
- What is a pump and dump scheme? (This is a scheme whereby
unscrupulous entities buy large quantities of a thinly-traded stock,
launch a massive PR campaign to promote the stock and stoke demand so
the price rises, and then they sell their stock to the victims and the
price collapses. Often this is done without the knowledge or
involvement of the company principals. This is what is happening when
you get breathless stock promotions on the Internet.)
- What should I do if I get a "cold call" from a broker? (If
someone you don't know calls you out of the blue to sell you stock,
hang up. It is a scam.)