Lesson 1, Topic 1
In Progress

securities exchange terminologies

Here are some common securities exchange terminologies:

  1. Securities: Financial instruments that represent ownership or debt in a company or government entity. Securities include stocks (equity securities) and bonds (debt securities).
  2. Stocks/Shares: Ownership units of a company. Investors who purchase shares become shareholders and have a claim on the company’s assets and earnings.
  3. Bonds: Debt instruments issued by companies or governments to raise capital. Bonds represent loans made by investors to the issuer, who promises to repay the principal amount with interest over a specified period.
  4. IPO (Initial Public Offering): The first sale of a company’s stock to the public. Companies undergo an IPO to raise capital by selling shares and becoming publicly traded entities.
  5. Listed Company: A company whose shares are traded on a securities exchange.
  6. Ticker Symbol: An abbreviation or unique set of characters assigned to a security for identification purposes during trading. Ticker symbols are used to place orders and track stock prices.
  7. Market Order: An order to buy or sell a security at the prevailing market price. Market orders are executed immediately.
  8. Limit Order: An order to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better. Limit orders are only executed if the market price reaches the specified limit.
  9. Bid Price: The highest price a buyer is willing to pay for a security at a given time.
  10. Ask/Offer Price: The lowest price at which a seller is willing to sell a security at a given time.
  11. Spread: The difference between the bid and ask prices of a security. It represents the transaction cost for buying or selling the security.
  12. Volume: The number of shares or contracts traded in a security during a specified period.
  13. Market Capitalization (Market Cap): The total value of a company’s outstanding shares, calculated by multiplying the current share price by the total number of shares outstanding.
  14. Dividend: A portion of a company’s profits distributed to shareholders as a return on their investment.
  15. Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs): Investment funds that trade on an exchange like a stock. ETFs represent a basket of securities and provide investors with exposure to a diversified portfolio.
  16. Circuit Breaker: A mechanism designed to temporarily halt trading on an exchange in the event of significant market declines to prevent panic selling.
  17. Short Selling: The practice of selling borrowed securities with the expectation of buying them back at a lower price in the future, thereby profiting from a decline in the security’s value.
  18. Margin Trading: Trading securities using borrowed funds from a broker, allowing investors to amplify potential returns but also increasing the risk.
  19. Stock Split: A division of existing shares into multiple shares. It increases the number of shares outstanding while reducing the share price proportionally.
  20. Delisting: The removal of a listed company’s shares from trading on an exchange, often due to failure to meet listing requirements or financial distress.

These are just a few examples of the terminologies used in securities exchanges. The specific terms and concepts may vary across different exchanges and jurisdictions.