T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
668.1 | | ERLANG::CHIU | Dah Ming Chiu | Tue Jan 25 1994 18:16 | 9 |
| Look in the legend. For Boston Globe, this is called "stock key".
Some of them are:
u - new high
d - new low
wt - warrant
pf - preferred stock
vi - bankrupt
n - new issue in last 52 wks
These conventions may not be the same for every paper.
|
668.2 | Can you give me more please? | RUFUSL::JANOWSKI | CitizensAgainstContinentalDrift | Wed Jan 26 1994 09:07 | 8 |
| Thanks but was does a warrant mean? What does a preferred stock
indicate? Who is perferred by? Why are there different listings for the
same company? How do they differ?
Sorry if these are silly questions but I have to start somewhere.
Thanks for your input.
|
668.3 | A few answers | KOALA::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Wed Jan 26 1994 11:29 | 10 |
| A warrant is essentially a stock option issued by the company. I.e.
the company might issue a warrant which gives you the right to buy 1
share of the company at $40/share up to January 1997.
"Preferred" stock comes in many types, and varies company to company so
much that it is impossible to give one answer. In many cases a
company's preferred stock pays a higher dividend per share, but may not
entitle one to a vote at a shareholder's meeting. Sometimes preferred
stock is "convertible", meaning it can be converted into 'common' stock
at a certain price.
|
668.4 | Selling Short | NEWPRT::GREEN_RI | Bad Spellers of the World, Untie! | Tue Feb 15 1994 16:45 | 11 |
|
I have a novice question
What does the term "selling short" and a "short position" mean?
My impression (from a conversation I was in) is that a short position
is when the investor thinks that the company will not do well.
How does this work?
-Rick
|
668.5 | Short | KOALA::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Tue Feb 15 1994 18:11 | 13 |
| Normally you buy a stock and hope to sell later at a profit.
Buying a stock like this is known as holding a "long" position in the
stock.
It is possible to sell a stock you don't own, hoping to buy it back at
a lower price later to repay the "loan" of the stock. If I sold 100
shares of DEC, even though I don't own any DEC, I'm said to be "short"
100 shares DEC.
The broker is loaning the shares to me (having probably borrowed them
from another client...) The broker will, of course, require additional
collateral to back up the loan.
|
668.6 | I think I got this | IVOS02::GREEN_RI | Bad Spellers of the World, Untie! | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:20 | 10 |
|
let me see if I understand this...
The brokerage firm loans me the stock and then sells it. They give me
the money. I then hope (pray?) the stock lowers in price, making the
loan of the stock cheaper to repay, and any surplus cash is profit.
Does that sound about right?
-Rick
|
668.7 | Funds are escrowed | KOALA::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:24 | 10 |
| re: .6
Almost right. Actually the broker puts the money in a special area of
your account; sort of like an escrow account. It forms the largest
part of the collateral on the loan of the stock. As the stock changes
in value the broker moves money between your 'escrow' account and your
real account such that the escrow account always contains approximately
enough money to buy back the stock. But until you repurchase or
otherwise provide stock to 'pay off' the loan you can't get at the
proceeds.
|
668.8 | | USCTR1::BJORGENSEN | | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:41 | 8 |
| It may be worth noting that if, say for example, the lending institution
needed to "sell" the lent equity - or the customer that they borrowed it
from wanted to sell, then you would be forced to close your position even
if you are not ready. Highly unlikely given the volumes, but I suppose that
it could happen.
-Brian
|
668.9 | What's an option? | IVOS02::GREEN_RI | Bad Spellers of the World, Untie! | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:39 | 10 |
|
Thank you all for the help so far.
I have another novice question...
What is a stock option?
-Rick
p.s. is there a FAQ somewhere?
|
668.10 | FAQ | KOALA::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Thu Feb 17 1994 17:44 | 5 |
| re: .9
Options have been discussed here; a title search should find anything.
Somebody should create a FAQ.
|
668.11 | wottza FAQ? | NECSC::BIELSKI | America's Zone Expertise Center | Fri Feb 18 1994 09:00 | 2 |
| somebody should tell the rest of us dummies what a FAQ is.
|
668.12 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Red X | Fri Feb 18 1994 09:23 | 7 |
| re <<< Note 668.11 by NECSC::BIELSKI "America's Zone Expertise Center" >>>
-< wottza FAQ? >-
Frequently
Asked
Questions
|
668.13 | | CPDW::ROSCH | | Fri Feb 18 1994 12:50 | 7 |
| For those of you who really want to study the way stock is traded I
suggest you pick up Pass Trak Series 7 General Securities
Representative, 7th. edition - Dearborn Financial Publishing ISBN
0-79310-534-4. I think it's about $50. Large format paperback. This is
the text used by Broker trainees to pass the Series 7 test to get their
broker's license. Very cut and dry. No political, economic opinion -
just what happens, the laws etc. about securities.
|
668.14 | Try the USENET for FAQ's! | MR1MI1::SHERWIN | Jim Sherwin | Fri Feb 18 1994 12:51 | 142 |
| RE: .10
> Somebody should create a FAQ.
Why reinvent the wheel? The USENET's misc.invest.* newsgroups
offer FAQ's for general investment and mutual fund topics.
These are FAQ's are posted monthly.
The misc.invest FAQ I have, date Jan 2nd is 60 pages and 3700 lines
long and 363 block in size. Not really appropriate for posting in
NOTESs. I've attached the article which includes the Table of
Contents and direction on How To Obtain.
The misc.invest.funds FAQ is 437 lines long and 53 blocks in size.
There is no Table of contents and the only means of obtaining is by
extracting from the newsgroup.
The misc.invest.* news group heirarchy inclued the following
newsgroups (at least on my newsreader RYN::)
misc.invest
misc.invest.canada
misc.invest.funds
misc.invest.real-estate
misc.invest.stocks
misc.invest.technical
Article: 61214
From: [email protected] (Christopher Lott)
Subject: misc.invest FAQ on general investment topics (Table of Contents)
Organization: University of Kaiserslautern, Germany
Date: Sun, 30 Jan 1994 01:02:11 GMT
Lines: 107
Archive-name: investment-faq/general/toc
Version: $Id: faq-toc,v 1.12 1994/01/28 16:45:29 lott Exp lott $
Compiler: Christopher Lott, [email protected]
This is the table of contents for the general misc.invest FAQ.
Articles in this FAQ discusses issues pertaining to money and
investment instruments, specifically stocks, bonds, and things
like options and life insurance. Subjects more appropriate to
misc.consumers are not included here. For extensive information
on mutual funds, see the mutual fund FAQ, which is maintained
by [email protected].
Disclaimers: Rules, regulations, laws, conditions, rates, and
such information discussed in this FAQ all change quite rapidly.
Information given here was current at the time of writing but is
almost guaranteed to be out of date by the time you read it.
Mention of a product does not constitute an endorsement. Answers
to questions sometimes rely on information given in other answers.
Readers outside the USA can reach US-800 telephone numbers, for a
charge, using a service such as MCI's Call USA. All prices are
listed in US dollars unless otherwise specified.
Availability of the FAQ:
via news:
posted monthly to misc.invest,misc.answers,news.answers
via anonymous ftp:
host: rtfm.mit.edu
path: /pub/usenet/news.answers/investment-faq/general/*
via mail:
address: [email protected]
required msg body: send usenet/news.answers/investment-faq/general/*
Please send comments and new submissions to the compiler.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Sources for Historical Stock Information
Beginning Investor's Advice
Dave Rhodes and Other Chain Letters
American Depository Receipts (ADR)
Bankrupt Broker
Beta
Bonds
Book-to-Bill Ratio
Books About Investing (especially stocks)
Bull and Bear Lore
Buying and Selling Stock Without a Broker
Computing the Rate of Return on Monthly Investments
Computing Compound Return
Discount Brokers
Dividends on Stock and Mutual Funds
Dollar Cost and Value Averaging
Dollar Bill Presidents
Dramatic Stock Price Increases and Decreases
Direct Investing and DRIPS
Future and Present Value of Money
Getting Rich Quickly
Charles Givens
Goodwill
Hedging
Investment Associations (AAII and NAIC)
Initial Public Offering (IPO)
Investment Jargon
Life Insurance
Money-Supply Measures M1, M2, and M3
Market Makers and Specialists
NASD Public Disclosure Hotline
One-Letter Ticker Symbols
One-Line Wisdom
Option Symbols
Options on Stocks
P/E Ratio
Pink Sheet Stocks
Renting vs. Buying a Home
Retirement Plan - 401(k)
Round Lots of Shares
Savings Bonds (from US Treasury)
SEC Filings available on Internet
Shorting Stocks
Stock Basics
Stock Exchange Phone Numbers
Stock Index Types
Stock Index - The Dow
Stock Indexes - Others
Stock Splits
Technical Analysis
Ticker Tape Terminology
Treasury Debt Instruments
Treasury Direct
Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA)
Warrants
Wash Sale Rule (from U.S. IRS)
Zero-Coupon Bonds
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Compiler's Acknowledgements:
My sincere thanks to the many submitters for their efforts. Also thanks to
Jonathan I. Kamens for his guidance on FAQs and his post_faq perl script.
Compilation Copyright (c) 1994 by Christopher Lott, [email protected]
--
"Christopher Lott / Email: [email protected] / Tel: +49 (631) 205-3334"
"Adresse: FB Informatik - Bau 57 / Universitaet KL / D--67653 Kaiserslautern"
|