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Trading 101: How Does the Stock Market Work?



Trading 101: How Does the Stock Market Work? Thanks to a subscriber on YouTube, I was given the suggestion to dig deep into "how" exactly the stock market works. Who is in the market? Why do people trade? How is money actually made? Free Guide - The 5 Tools I Use To Find Stocks To Trade: https://claytrader.com/lp/Free-Guide-Trading-Tools/?utm_source=social&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=resource%20guide Enjoy this Free Content? I'm confident you'd enjoy my premium training courses then: https://claytrader.com/training/ Hear real life trading journeys from "normal" people: The Stock Trading Reality Podcast - https://claytrader.com/podcast/

Comments

  1. youre super attractive for no reason though.
  2. Hey clay why would anyone want to buy your share if it goes up? Is their any time you cant sell your share and your stuck with it?
  3. nice subscribed
  4. sorry.. just seeing this now.. would definitely be interested in a similar video of how the stock market floor works.
  5. Thanks Man.. Really Helpful..
    Now lets see what the future holds for me..

    Ill start it too now..πŸ€žπŸΌπŸ‘πŸΌπŸ˜Ž
  6. This is a great video! Amazing
  7. this is awesome, you can rich from lottery from that Pizza
  8. im checking another video, ive subscribed also. but i have a question ,who does the pricing of the stocks? are u capable of overpricing ur stock or vise-versa?
  9. How does the broker make money? Commission from whom? Buyer? Seller? How?
  10. Clay bro that was so well explained... stay doing good and god bless man
  11. why does companies ...split their bussines into stocks ....and sell it as shares???
  12. I have got three questions. Does the transactions always have to go through brokers? Who does the brokers earn money from, the buyers or the sellers? How do you reach the brokers, online or in person at first?
  13. I'm a beginner, i don't know where to start. Can i start the market on my phone? I'm only 16, but i want to make money. But also know how to control the stock market.
  14. Does the broker gets his cut from it?
  15. what is the profit of broker with all this trading it does on behalf of the buyer and seller ?
  16. good video, thank you for this simple explanation.
  17. πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ok thank u a lot this really helped me out on my school assignment
  18. is it possible do all the shares of the company and own the company ur self
  19. Great introductory video! It all started with early live market trading - selling cattle, corn, vegetables and the like. Buyers and sellers used to meet at the town square and haggle (bargain) prices and deals would take place. Then with industrialization, companies needed to raise money. So they devised a plan to go to the public and sell parts of their company for a dollar amount (not material parts, parts of ownership). This they called "a share" So 1 share is a representation of ownership in a company. For example Facebook, (FB) their initial offering was about $38/- a share when it started trading in May 2012. Then in August 2012, Facebook's share dipped to $19.69. Today March 17, 2017 the single share value is $139.99 Suppose a lady, let's say her name is Helen, aged 62, purchased 100 shares on May 2012 at the Initial Public Offering (IPO) that would have cost her $3800/- She wanted to save for her retirement and thought Facebook would be a good company to invest in by holding on to that stock and see the company's value rise. Today let's say she is 67 years old and wants to sell her stock of 100 shares of FB @ $139.99 per share. Someone (a buyer) unseen through any brokerage will buy it because FB shares are still in demand. (*If FB did not do so well, then there won't be any buyers, so that's the risk you run into trading stocks. The share has to be in demand at the current point of time you decide you want to sell and are looking for a buyer). So she sells it. $139.99 x 100 shares = $13,999/- Her profit: $13,999 - $3,800 = $10,199. No bank will give you this sort of return in just 5 years. Not in your wildest dreams. That is why people clamor after stocks/ shares of good performing companies. Of course, all earnings are subject to Capital Gains tax - Gains you make on selling a stock. (a collection of shares of a single company).
  20. might be a stupid question but how do I get onto the stock market?


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Visibility: 54412

Duration: 11m 47s

Rating: 970