What is a Stock?
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- What is a stock? Stocks are often called equity as well as it refers to "shareholders' equity." A stock is a percentage ownership in a company. The stock price reflects the future profits and losses of a firm. Predicting these cashflows of profits or losses is challenging however looking at the balance sheet, it is easier to understand how equity is calculated.
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Wait... can the price of a stock be influenced by the number of people buying it aside from the company's own performance?
Yes, the supply and demand impact the price however these driven by a fear that someone mispriced the future.
Noob here, is IPO necessary to sell the stocks?
No, it’s called private equity
What application are you using to diagram this explanation? Looks really nice
Krita which is just a free drawing software and then OBS to record the screen.
@@DimitriBianco Just putting it here in case you ever need it: If you want another software that's simplistic, I recommend "Concepts". I think it's available on all OS.
great video. Thank you.
Hi Dimitri,
In 2024, I'm keen on teaching myself quantitative finance. Could you suggest the best online resources available, including both free and premium options, that are truly worth investing in? Also, I'm curious about the possibility of becoming an independent quantitative analyst who can generate significant profits. Is this achievable solo, or would I require a team and substantial data resources? Can an individual create a profitable model that continues to yield returns over time?
how do you write on black screen ?
Krita drawing software and I set the background layer to black. Then other layers are transparent and used for writing.
Hey Dimitri. I'm an industrial engineer but I want to take a masters in stats. I've taken calc, linear algebra, stats, etc but I still feel like I'm lacking a bit because the program I'm interested in seems to be very rigorous.
So I'm self studying discrete math, real analysis, if only for the mathematical maturity, and later a bit of measure theory to help in probability theory. Obviously stats too but I feel like I have a solid base. Would you recommend anything else? Thanks.
many thanks