In this quick video, I'll talk about the difference between shares and stocks. This is something that a lot of people get wrong, but is actually very simple to get right!
Thanks Anand! Glad you enjoyed the video. Also, building PCs is a lot easier that it sounds. It's like LEGO for grown-ups haha. If you're ever interested, check out logicalincrements.com. That's a great starting place.
Thanks it was very helpful and very simple for someone who has no knowledge about market others are just making big difference between videos which are very hard to understand in my country's language and made a video in English which is not my language but still it was easier to understand
Please provide a more concrete EXAMPLE of a ShARE and a Stock! I am a newbwee learning Economics, I have all sorts of question. Can you show me how a share looks like? and how a stock looks like?
Great video. Thank you. Do you have any suggestions for an income stream that doesn’t involve selling things on the internet. A income stream that possibly could replace my 9-5. Please say YES. 😂
Thank you! I do my best :) As for income streams, I recommend you watch one of Graham Stephan's videos about this. I think he recently posted a video about this.
Lol typical youtuber response instead of answering the question u send them to watch another video or pay for "training" n half the time they jus rambling about nth.
Yeah, its something like S&P 500 stock trading on the NYSE which contains 500 companies; but don't get twisted cause the shares of a company all together is what makes up the stock, so in general the S&P 500(Standard and Poor's 500) tracks the stock of 500 well known companies in the US.
I'm sorry, but I don't know anything about demat accounts... You'd have to look at the regulations in your country, but normally it should be ok to have more than one.
My company i work for have offered me the opportunity to by shares in the company at a discounted price the company is in growth and making profits even in the pandemic what should I do
Seriously. I searched for this. Imma be one of those business women who own stocks n has multiple tabs open on her computer to keep up with the market. So cool. Just thought you should know.
What are the risks on investing in the stock market? How can I minimize my risk when I invest? What will I expect when I first invest in the stock market? And what is the most important rule in investing?
@@tristanbautista6100 my man, i suggest you to read books if you haven't already. There is no particular answer for it. Read Robert Kiyosaki's books. He explains it in extremely simple words. Start with rich dad poor dad then read cashflow quadrant.
thanks bro! I will subscribe if you make a video about our question and Invite my friend : I have a question! when we trade Tesla or suppose Silver, We will buy a real percentage of Tesla company or Silver in Grams? It's like that or not? if not it means that whole thing that we see is virtual things! Or if it's real percentage how you can lose your whole stock ???*(100%= whole Trade NO SET FOR STOP LOST) of your invested money when the Tesla is not bankrupted! or about the silver, I think It never loses the whole value in the market? can anyone explain it to me?
When you invest in a stock, you're buying a small fraction of the business. It's a real, tangible amount. It's not virtual and has a real value attached to it. Of course, the business can still go bankrupt, but if you do your homework and diversify, it's very unlikely.
@@DividendCompass I am a new investors i haven't traded yet 😁and i want to trade, i know some basic concept of stock market. I want you to teach me 🙇♂️
I thought shares are a piece of cake in a company stock, and stocks are the whole cake of an individual company. One owns shares in a single company stock. And one owns stocks in different companies? Is that what you are explaining?
@@DividendCompass yes I was going to put $40 in a company, a share. I reviewed it and it said its 0.798 is what I would get out of the $40. I'm not sure what that means
Sounds like it's the dividend the company pays. If it's yearly, that's a 2% dividend yield, which is a little low but not too bad. But remember that you're also going to get price appreciation over time, assuming it's a good and growing company.
You couldve made it quicker The explanation would have uust taken 15 seconds I have an exam tmrw and im trying to learn something here and u plan to waste my time with getting in to ur conputer, samanthas t shirt and that fuckin guys size 😂