Home
Soccer Betting Basics
Soccer History
Premiership News
Bundesliga News
Spain Primera News
Soccer Betting
Soccer Betting Strategy
Soccer Betting Tips
Soccer Millionaire
Betting Investment
Betting Newbie
Money Management
Betting Systems
Betting Fixed Odds
Betting Arbitrage
Betting Asian Handicap
Lay Betting
Betting Over - Under
Betting Dutching
Betting Exchanges
Online Sports Trading
Online Soccer Betting
Soccer Betting Articles
Soccer Video News
Free Picks
League Stats
Live Asian Odds
Odds Comparison
Livescore
Risk Free Betting
Betting Notebook
Gaming Investment
Professional Bettor
Sports Betting Basics
Bookstore
Shopping Mall
Bookmarker
Betfair
Betsson
Sportsbook
Traditional Investment
Soccer Betting System
Sports Investing
Betting Resources
Partners
Contact Us
Betting Systems 2010
MLB First Inning
Live Betting
Betting Tip
World Cup 2010
 



How the Stock Market Works



There are many people who are invested in the stock market. Many of us who have money in any type of retirement account can count ourselves as a participant in the market as a whole. But have you ever stopped and wondered how the stock market actually works? Have you ever attended an auction? If you have then you might be able to relate with the daily operation of the stock market because it's basically just that, an auction for shares of ownership of publicly traded companies.

As in an auction, there is an auctioneer. But in the New York Stock Exchange (the largest stock market in the world) and the American Stock Exchange he is called a market maker. The market maker tries to match buyers with sellers just as an auctioneer would. There is no set price for a share of stock. Institutions and traders bid to buy and offer to sell and the price is set by the market maker. The price will fluctuate throughout the day depending on supply and demand. There is no fixed price for a share of stock. Bidders buy on the expectation that the price will go higher and sellers sell because they think the price will go lower. It's a huge psychological game that repeats itself daily.

Many of you have seen the floor of the NYSE on the news or on CNN during news reports about the trading day. Maybe you have seen the ringing of the bell to announce the beginning or the end of the trading day. It really is a sight to watch floor traders buy and sell their shares with the emotions of fear of loss and the greed of potential profit. The actual participants look at the stock market as something completely different as most investors.

The NASDAQ operates completely different from the New York and American Stock exchanges. The NASDAQ operates completely electronically. The trades placed on the NASDAQ are placed through a huge computerized network. It's still an auction but buyers and sellers place their bids and offer shares through the network. If you can imagine a sheet of paper split down the middle into columns with bidders on one side and sellers listing their ask prices on the other. On each side both are put into different levels depending on their bid or ask price. The highest bid price gets the honor of the top slot in the buyer’s column and the lowest sell price receives the same on the sell side. This is basically a description of the quote system called Level II which active traders pay close attention to as they make their daily trades.

To many of us all this goes on behind the scenes. For a growing number of people this has become an area of study as the internet has given them access to the daily auction called the stock market. The number of online traders has steadily grown since the nineteen-nineties and some have profited handsomely and continue to do so. Others consider themselves fortunate that all this goes on behind the scenes and are content with their mutual fund. Whichever camp you find yourself in, the objective is the same…to make a profit in the greatest auction in the world.

Source:Candlestick Trading For Maximum Profits