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#277852 - 24/03/2006 15:51 Re: Stock Market [Re: wfaulk]
matthew_k
pooh-bah

Registered: 12/02/2002
Posts: 2298
Loc: Berkeley, California
So the value changes over time. Nothing to be surpised at. If everyone knew how a company was going to do, the stock market wouldn't be necessary, and they'd be traded like bonds. Actually, the owner would probably issue bonds instead of giving up a controlling position, but that's a technicality.

For a growth stock, the question is always when the growth is going to stop. Is google going to once again some day be the company that just provides a lone search box on their home page? Or are they going to provide you The Google Desktop and leave you with no need for a windows computer? The search box and associated advertising are decent money makers, but it's the all encompassing google desktop or hope of some other revolutionary product that really props up thier stock price. If it becomes increasingly clear that WYSIWYG with google, the stock price will come down to match their earnings much more closely.

Matthew

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#277853 - 24/03/2006 16:40 Re: Stock Market [Re: wfaulk]
genixia
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 08/02/2002
Posts: 3411
Quote:
But you're talking about two different things. In the case of an iPod, you're basing its value (at least partially) on its utility, much of which is very subjective.


Ok, so the analogy didn't help much.

Quote:

There is a difference between cost and value. The stock market tries to make the cost equal the value, but it's not exact. Let's take the example of a company that was at one time trading for $20 a share, but gets bought out for cash at $1 a share. Those people who bought at $20 paid fair market value at the time. But they ultimately only recieved $1 back. The cost was $20, but they bought something that had an ultimate value of $1. (It's possible that that might be advantageous to them after the fact for some reason -- taxes, probably -- but on its own, it shows that cost and value are not the same thing.)


I don't see that as a cost vs value issue. I see that as a value at one point in time vs a value at another point of time issue. Something had to have happened to devalue that stock.
_________________________
Mk2a 60GB Blue. Serial 030102962 sig.mp3: File Format not Valid.

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#277854 - 24/03/2006 17:26 Re: Stock Market [Re: genixia]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
For the record, my initial question has been answered and I'm fine with the answer. We're just arguing semantics now.

What I'm saying is that you can pay money for something and have the value of that thing be more or less than the value of the money you paid. If that were not the case, no one would invest in the stock market, because, as we've determined, the ultimate value of the stock is determined by dividends the company pays plus end-of-life returns. My argument is that that ultimate value never changes, it's just impossible to know, since it's a fixed point in the future. The price you pay for stock is pushed by the stock market to what people think that ultimate value is going to be, and it's usually probably pretty close.

What you're saying is that the amount of money it would cost to buy all the shares of the company is the value of the company. I'm just saying that I'd rather reserve the term "value" for it's total final payoff and call the cost of buying all the shares something else. And the reason I say that is that, like I already pointed out, if you were to somehow buy all of the shares and then liquidate the company, the amount of money you got out of the liquidation is likely to be more than the amount you paid for the stock. Otherwise, corporate raiders wouldn't exist. And I contend that there needs to be separate terms for the price of all the shares combined and the ultimate value of the company.

But, like I said, I think we're just arguing semantics.
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Bitt Faulk

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#277855 - 25/03/2006 11:25 Re: Stock Market [Re: wfaulk]
DWallach
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
You can borrow some terminology from accounting to make the discussion more clear. Present value is what you pay today. Future value is what it's worth tomorrow. When you're making an investment decision, you're (hopefully) making your best educated guess about the future value, adjusting that to the present day (discounting it against the inflation between now and then), and then deciding whether the adjusted future value is worth more than the present value. If so, you have a rational justification for buying the stock.

Of course, nobody in 1986 could have predicted that Microsoft would have 288:1 worth of stock splits over the next two decades and ultimately pay dividends that were 5x the purchase price of the stock. That uncertainty necessarily depresses the present value of the shares to a rational buyer. Nonetheless, there is still a present value and a future value and they're never the same.

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#277856 - 25/03/2006 20:22 Re: Stock Market [Re: DWallach]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Cool. Accepted terminology always helps.
_________________________
Bitt Faulk

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#277857 - 25/03/2006 20:46 Re: Stock Market [Re: wfaulk]
genixia
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 08/02/2002
Posts: 3411
Yeah, semantics!
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#277858 - 25/03/2006 20:51 Re: Stock Market [Re: wfaulk]
Mataglap
enthusiast

Registered: 11/06/2003
Posts: 384
Well, it's possible and practical -- though not easy -- to make money as a day trader, so there's obviously value in it beyond the direct relationship to ownership.

I suppose it is a house of cards (or maybe collaborative hallucination is a better phrase), but I think that any system that tries to connect abstract
philosophical ideas to the concrete real world in a usable way is equally flimsy. Look at the concepts of marriage, goverment, or law. Examine those beyond just how they're used and praticed. At some point you cross a boundry between how it works and what it means.

--Nathan

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#277859 - 25/03/2006 21:23 Re: Stock Market [Re: Mataglap]
DWallach
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
Day trading is a whole different world (plus, you'll note I was careful to talk about "rational" investing behavior). The only clearly rational (i.e., even Bitt would agree it makes sense) form of day trading I've ever heard of is currency arbitrage. You program your computer to watch all the pairwise exchange rates. If you can find a cycle that causes your money to increase when you make a complete loop, then you push as much money through that cycle as fast as you can until the cycle closes.

The only other possibly rational way to make money with day trading is to have hair-triggered reflexes combined with hard core financial modelling. If you detect a security that, for whatever reason, has dropped below the price your model says it should have, then you buy, buy, buy. If it gets above, then sell, sell, sell. Of course, your model might be wrong and you could get deeply screwed.

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#277860 - 25/03/2006 22:27 Re: Stock Market [Re: DWallach]
lectric
pooh-bah

Registered: 20/01/2002
Posts: 2085
Loc: New Orleans, LA
And the funny thing to me, is that when people buy buy buy, the price of a stock goes up, if a LOT of people do it at the same time. Opposite is true when you dump stock.

Supply and demand shouldn't have an effect on stocks, if you ask me. But then, nobody does.

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#277861 - 26/03/2006 02:07 Re: Stock Market [Re: lectric]
DWallach
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
Quote:
Supply and demand shouldn't have an effect on stocks, if you ask me. But then, nobody does.

Why not? Stocks are just like any other good for which there will be supply and demand, and basic economics tells you what's supposed to happen to the price.

As such, the price going up or down actually makes huge amounts of sense. For fun, let's look closer. Assume, for the moment, that there's no such thing as a market order ("buy now at whatever the current price is"). Instead, it's all limit orders ("buy at this price, or anything cheaper if you can get it, otherwise wait until you can get my price"). In such a world, whenever my limited buy and your limited sell overlap, the market pairs us up and away we go. As such, what you're left with is buyers looking at a price that's lower than any seller is willing to part with. You can go to Yahoo or whatever and see the real-time list of open orders and it's exactly like this.

Now, stir in market orders. If you issue a market buy order, you're saying "take whoever has the lowest selling price posted and give me that". If your order happened to be much larger than whoever was first in line with an open sell order, then you end up going to several higher sellers as well. Good for them, bad for you. As a result, you will have increased the spread between the first open seller (the "ask") and the first open buyer (the "bid"). The spread is, in fact, a pretty good measure of how liquid or illiquid a given share happens to be. If there's a lot of volume, then the spread will be very small, and market orders will be very efficient. If there's little volume, then market orders can get screwed. (If you're ever doing a non-trivial stock transaction, and you're not in a nowNowNOW! hurry, pay the extra bucks for a limit order.)

The "price" that's recorded for a stock is simply the last price at which a trade happens to have occured. As such, even if you see the "price" go down, that doesn't mean that you'll be able to buy at that price. Instead, you might be seeing a transient because a big market sell order consumed a bunch of lower buy orders. I expect that the "big boys" have enough visibility into the market to see the full stream of transactions, allowing them to distinguish between transient price fluctuation and genuine market motion. "Wow, somebody posted a sell order for that? I'll take it!" The only way that "normal" investors can do such a thing is to have some kind of standing buy (limit) order. Otherwise, that great deal will be gone long before you can hit the "buy" button.

Advanced topic for another day: market makers who try to keep a stock's trading liquid, and how they can make money off the spread. (Incidentally, the Wikipedia article on day trading is a good read.)

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