by StormPetrel1
Question by KAI: Can someone explain Wall Street, market capitalization, company equity, *stock exchange & more?
I’m really stupid, and would like to know.
10 POINTS AND APPRECIATION FOR THE PERSON WITH THE BEST ANSWER!
was unsure of what section to put this in, sorry.
Best answer:
Answer by juicebox
wall street: a financial district in New York, home of various stock exchanges, like the New York Stock Exchange. It’s essentially the financial center of the world.
Market Capitalization: the number of shares a company has multiplied by their market price. So if a company had 1,000,000 shares at 5$ each, it’s market capitalization would be $ 5,000,000. A share is basically a security that represents ownership in a company.
Company Equity: the assets of a company minus its liabilities. Assets are anything that generate revenue for a firm or increase its value, like plant equipment, cash, inventory, and accounts receivable (accounts receivable is very simply “money owed to a company by its debtors”. An example would be when you purchase a car. You don’t normally pay the whole thing up front; you enter a plan where you make monthly payments to pay it off). Liabilities are financial obligations a company has. So this means, in the future they will have to spend revenue to meet those obligations. An example would be a company that has financed itself through bonds which are debt instruments.
Stock Exchange: a stock exchange is the market for securities and equity derivatives trading (the trading of company shares, equity derivates: search options and futures).
Search “equity financing investopedia” or “share investopedia” and there will be a more clear and comprehensive definition with articles that will give you a walk through. Investopedia is actually the best site for finance and economics; it has articles and definitions for introductory financial and economic concepts all the way up to the more complex ones like derivatives, securitization and hedging. Sorry if this wasn’t any help
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