People are constantly being affected by the fluctuations in the global economy and by financial uncertainty - with major impacts on their savings, portfolios and pensions. Some might see recessions as the very worst time to invest in the stock market, but many of the world's most successful investors insist that a market downturn is the very moment when people should be investing. Fully updated for this fourth edition, How the Stock Market Works tells investors what is being traded and how, who does what and to whom, and how to evaluate both the shares and the proponents' claims about them. Covering crucial issues such as the practical consequences of being a shareholder, this book provides a wealth of information on the stock market and how to use it one's advantage.
How the Stock Market Works A beginner’s guide to investment i ii THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK FOURTH EDITION How the Stock Market Works A beginner’s guide to investment MICHAEL BECKET iii If you speculate on the stock market, you do so at your own risk. Publisher’s note Every possible effort has been made to ensure that the information contained in this book is accurate at the time of going to press, and the publishers and authors cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions, however caused. No responsibility for loss or damage occasioned to any person acting, or refraining from action, as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by the editor, the publisher or either of the authors. First published in 2002 Second edition, 2004 Third edition 2010 Fourth edition 2012 Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licences issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned addresses: 120 Pentonville Road 1518 Walnut Street, Suite 1100 4737/23 Ansari Road London N1 9JN Philadelphia PA 19102 Daryaganj United Kingdom USA New Delhi 110002 www.koganpage.com India © Michael Becket, 2002, 2004 © Michael Becket and Yvette Essen, 2010 © Michael Becket, 2012 The right of Michael Becket to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. ISBN 978 0 7494 6402 8 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Becket, Michael (Michael Ivan H.) How the stock market works : a beginner’s guide to investment / Michael Becket. 4th ed. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 978-0-7494-6402-8 1. Portfolio management. 2. Investment analysis. 3. Stock exchanges. I. Title. HG4529.5.B43 2011 332.64’2 dc23 2011036258 Typeset by Saxon Graphics Ltd, Derby Production managed by Jellyfish Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Antony Rowe iv Contents How this book can help viii Acknowledgements x 01 What and why are shares? 1 Quoted shares 2 Returns 4 Stock markets 4 02 What are bonds and gilts? 6 Bonds 6 Preference shares 10 Convertibles 11 Gilts 11 03 The complicated world of derivatives 15 Pooled investments 15 Other derivatives 21 04 Foreign shares 32 05 How to pick a share 35 Strategy 39 The economy 45 Picking shares 46 v Contents 1 What and why are shares? 1 Quoted shares 2 Returns 4 Stock markets 4 6 Bonds 6 What are bonds and gilts? 6 Preference shares 10 Convertibles 11 Gilts 11 15 Pooled investments 15 The complicated world of derivatives 15 Other derivatives 21 32 Foreign shares 32 35 How to pick a share 35 Strategy 39 The economy 45 Picking shares 46 58 Tricks of the professionals 58 Fundamental analysis 59 Technical analysis 71 72 Advice 72 Where to nd advice and information 72 Information 78 Indices 87 Online 88 Company accounts 89 Using the accounts 99 Other information from companies 100 Other sources 101 Complaints 104 106 What does it take to deal in shares? 106 Investment clubs 108 Costs 110 114 How to trade in shares 114 How to buy and sell shares 115 Using intermediaries 116 Trading 123 Stock markets 123 Other markets 124 130 When to deal in shares 130 Charts 137 Technical tools 144 Sentiment indicators 145 Other indicators 146 Selling 148 151 Information 151 Consequences of being a shareholder 151 Annual general meeting 152 Extraordinary general meeting 152 Consultation 152 Dividends 153 Scrip issues 153 Rights issues 153 Nominee accounts 155 Regulated markets 155 Codes of conduct 156 Takeovers 157 Insolvency 158 161 Tax 161 Dividends 162 Capital prots 162 Employee share schemes 163 Tax incentives to risk 164 ISAs 164 Tax rates 165 Contents vi 06 Tricks of the professionals 58 Fundamental analysis 59 Technical analysis 71 07 Where to find advice and information 72 Advice 72 Information 78 Indices 87 Online 88 Company accounts 89 Using the accounts 99 Other information from companies 100 Other sources 101 Complaints 104 08 What does it take to deal in shares? 106 Investment clubs 108 Costs 110 09 How to trade in shares 114 How to buy and sell shares 115 Using intermediaries 116 Trading 123 Stock markets 123 Other markets 124 10 When to deal in shares 130 Charts 137 Technical tools 144 Sentiment indicators 145 Other indicators 146 Selling 148 Contents vii 11 Consequences of being a shareholder 151 Information 151 Annual general meeting 152 Extraordinary general meeting 152 Consultation 152 Dividends 153 Scrip issues 153 Rights issues 153 Nominee accounts 155 Regulated markets 155 Codes of conduct 156 Takeovers 157 Insolvency 158 12 Tax 161 Dividends 162 Capital prots 162 Employee share schemes 163 Tax incentives to risk 164 ISAs 164 Tax rates 165 Glossary 166 Index 172 How this book can help M aking money demands effort, whether working for a salary or investing. You get nothing for nothing. Anyone who tells you the stock market is an absolute doddle, and money for old rope, is either a conman or a fool. And the proof of that became very clear with the stock market depressions starting in 2007. But doing a bit of work does not necessarily mean heavy mathematics and several hours every day with the nancial press, the internet and company reports – though a bit of all those is vital – but it does mean taking the trouble to learn the language, doing a bit of research and thinking through what it is you really want and what price you are prepared to pay for it. At the very least that learning will put the investor on a more even footing with the people trying to sell. It has been hard enough earning the money, so this book helps with the little bit extra to make sure the cash is not wasted. There are few general rules about investment but the most important is very simple: if something or somebody offers a substantially higher prot than you can get elsewhere, there is a risk attached. The world of investment is pretty sophisticated and pretty efcient (in the economists’ sense that participants can be fairly well informed), so everything has a price. And the price for higher returns is higher risk. There is nothing wrong in that – Chapter 5 sets out how to decide what your acceptable level is – but the point is it has to be a conscious decision to accept the dangers rather than make a greedy grab for what seems a bargain. Scepticism is vital but it needs to be helped with something to judge information by, and this book provides that. In the end though, there is no better protection than common sense, asking oneself what is likely, plausible or possible. For instance, why should this man be offering me an infallible way of making a fortune when he could be using it himself without my participation? Why is the share price of this company soaring through the roof when I cannot viii ix How this book can help see any reasonable substance behind it? What does the market know about that company that I do not which makes its shares seem to provide such a high return? What is my feeling about the economy that would justify the way share prices in general are moving? The stock market is of course not the only avenue of investment. People buy their own homes, organize life assurance and pension policies, and have rainy-day money accessible in banks and building societies. And indeed those foundations should probably precede getting into the stock market, which is generally more volatile and risky. Shares have had their low moments, for example at the dotcom crash or more recently during the credit crisis, but over any reasonably middle-term view the stock market has provided a better return than most other forms of investment. That, however, is an average and a longish view, so you still have to know what you are doing. That is why this book starts with setting out what the various nancial instruments are: shares and other things issued by companies, bonds and gilts, and then derivatives, which are the clever ways of packaging those primary investments. Each has its own character, benets and drawbacks. That helps with the decision on where to put your money. At least as important is the timing. That applies whether you are an in-and-out energetic trader or a long-term investor, and Chapter 10 will provide help. Acknowledgements I am grateful to Kay Broadbent for her insights and advice, which I occasionally followed. The mistakes of both omission and commission however are mine alone. I would also like to thank Barclays Capital for the charts from its publication, Barclays Bank Equity Gilt Study. x [...]... factors, whether prompted by economic circumstance or fashion, may reverse just as quickly and have the fund at the top of the table It may also have had a clumsy investment manager who has since been replaced by a star recruited from the competition As a vehicle for recurrent investments, or as an additional safeguard against fluctuating markets, many of these organizations have regular savings arrangements... into the future One trust may have done awfully well, but it may just be the fluke of having been in a sector or area that suddenly became fashionable – retail, Japan, biotechnology, financials, emerging markets, etc There is also the factor that somebody good at dealing with the financial circumstances of 10 years ago may not be as good at analysing the market of today, much less of tomorrow On top... knocking on the shareholders’ door Stock markets The language of investment sometimes seems designed to confuse the novice For instance, shares are traded on the stock exchange, What and why are shares? not the share exchange Nobody really knows why it came to be called the stock exchange’ One theory has it that it was on the site of a meat and fish market in the City and the blocks on which those traders... cut are called stocks An alternative theory has it that stocks of the pillory kind used to stand on the site In the Middle Ages the receipt for tax paid was a tally stick with appropriate notches It was split in half, with the taxpayer getting the stock and the Exchequer getting the foil or counter -stock Some have suggested the money from investors was used to buy stocks for the business Strictly speaking,... ETFs are baskets of securities generally tracking an index, a market or an asset class They are dealt on the stock exchange and have no entry or exit fees, but, as they trade like other shares, they attract brokerage charges and do have annual fees of usually under 0.5 per cent Also like tracker funds they may not buy every share in the index tracked (called ‘total replication’) but may use some sampling... by the end of the stated period the seller pays the buyer the difference in price, and if the price has fallen the buyer pays the seller the difference CFDs are available in unlisted or listed markets in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Singapore, South Africa, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Sweden, France, Ireland, Japan and Spain, but not the United States where they... defined by the Financial Services Authority Investors in CFDs are required to maintain a margin as defined by the brokerage or market- maker, usually from 1 to 30 per cent of the notional value of leading equities That means investors need only a small proportion of the value of a position to trade and hence they offer exposure to the markets at a small percentage of the cost of owning the actual share It... top of that, the chances are that whoever was in charge 10 years ago to take the fund to the top of the league tables will have been poached by a rival company The converse holds equally true A fund may have been handicapped by being committed to investment in Japan at a time The complicated world of derivatives when Japan fell out of fashion or hit a rough patch, or in internet stocks when the net... period at a predetermined price, known as the ‘exercise’ or ‘strike’ price They are also issued by some investment trusts Since the paper therefore has some easily definable value, warrants are traded on the stock market, with the price related to the underlying shares: the value is the market price of the share minus the strike price They can gear up an investment For instance, if the share stands at... So the companies described as being blue chip are the largest, safest businesses on the stock market The companies in the FTSE100 Index, being the hundred biggest companies in the country by stock market valuation, are by definition all blue chips That is reckoned to make them the safest bets around What and why are shares? The theory is not unreasonable – large companies are more stable than small . traded on the stock market, with the price related to the underlying shares: the value is the market price of the share minus the strike price. They can. awkward. A public marketplace was devised for trading them – a stock exchange. Companies ‘go public’ when they get their 1 How the stock market works 2 shares