What difference does it make how many shares are being sold/bought, so long as they are? — creativesoul
In this current dramatic drop, the explanation is often that everyone is dumping stocks... everyone is selling. But, I'm confused here... there cannot be a seller without a buyer, and if someone is buying all the shares being sold, then how are they losing value? — creativesoul
What determines the huge drop in value?
In this current dramatic drop, the explanation is often that everyone is dumping stocks... everyone is selling. But, I'm confused here... there cannot be a seller without a buyer, and if someone is buying all the shares being sold, then how are they losing value? What difference does it make how many shares are being sold/bought, so long as they are? How does more selling and buying result in an overall drop in value?
Are the shares being sold at discount prices; below the current stock value? If not, then what reason is there for the value to drop?
Someone please explain this to me. — creativesoul
It's a market.There are buyers, but shares are changing hands at much lower prices due to the loss of confidence and the fear of economic downturn. What determines the value of shares is a dark art but the bottom line is that they reflect the company's perceived value in terms of current sales and prospects. — Wayfarer
One of the factors is that the stock market has been inflated by the injection of 'cheap money' as a consequence of very low interest rate regime which has held sway since the 2008 crisis. This has arguably resulted in a massive bubble or over-valuation of stocks, which has now been thoroughly deflated by the appearance of a global pandemic. This pandemic is going to have huge economic consequences with many businesses, large and small, collapsing or going into hibernation, and possibly millions of jobs lost. — Wayfarer
What difference does it make how many shares are being sold/bought, so long as they are?
— creativesoul
What matters is the price that they are being bought and sold at. — StreetlightX
People are still buying, but they are buying at lower and lower prices. Reciprocally, sellers are selling at lower prices too. It's not the volume or rate of shares traded ('more buying and selling') that makes the difference, but how much people are will to pay and to acquire stocks. — StreetlightX
The rough reason they are dropping is that people are worried about the profitability of the companies they hold shares in, which is dropping across the board because are people no longer spending money on things (like flights, entertainment, retail, etc). People not spending money = no profits. No profits = no return on investments in stocks = better to unload (sell) those stocks.
Bubbles are structural imbalances in the market... — Benkei
What and/or who determines the selling price? — creativesoul
How can so many people be selling if there are no buyers. — creativesoul
You make it sound as if the buyer is driving and/or establishing the actual share(selling) price. Is that a misreading? — creativesoul
What and/or who determines the selling price?
In the world that I live in the seller does that, and only drops the purchase/sales price if they see fit for whatever reason. That reason is never ever to intentionally reduce profitability or consumer confidence. That reason is never to sell my product as a means to render my customer at a financial loss. — creativesoul
Is this a matter of public record? — creativesoul
In uncertain times a lot of investors like to invest in more stable investments and are prepared to "take a loss". — Benkei
No, but it doesn't particularly matter. This isn't some grand conspiracy. — StreetlightX
Is this a matter of public record? — creativesoul
So, it all started somewhere and snowballed. Who first began dumping huge numbers of shares at a lower price, and who is buying them? Is this a matter of public record? — creativesoul
So... hypothetically, such an investor could sell off all his airline stock at a lower price than the current market value, or would those lower prices be the new share price? — creativesoul
what's stopping a corporation from buying back most of it's own stock at a higher price for the sole purpose of convincing others that it's value has increased? — creativesoul
So... hypothetically, such an investor could sell off all his airline stock at a lower price than the current market value, or would those lower prices be the new share price? — creativesoul
Keep in mind, that the listed price does not mean someone is buying or selling, only that there is (usually a substantial) offer at that price. — boethius
That the Global economy goes into a sudden recession.What determines the huge drop in value? — creativesoul
What and/or who determines the selling price? — creativesoul
or would those lower prices be the new share price? — creativesoul
I have read that the price world moves so fast that a premium is paid for real estate closer to the market - presumably the NYSE - so that trades orders will not be horribly delayed by the time it takes a digital signal to travel an extra few miles. And for similar reasons, money is spent on computer cables and computer configurations that will minimize the length of those cables - so that computers will work that much faster. That's not a world I live in, nor could live in. I should not have said easier; I should have said impossible for most folks.Tim, it is easier to arbitrage in a digital world because price information is more readily accessible. — Benkei
There are no more tools available (nor the prospect of until now "unthought of" tools) that can encourage traders to believe the free market will be stabilized by collectivists schemes of one form or another. — boethius
There are plenty of tools available. The problem is that solutions are based on stochastic models for a global economy that is too complex to be caught in such models. So the cure doesn't cure or creates a lot of unwanted side effects. — Benkei
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