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Newbie warning.
I am watching some ASX shares and they are experiencing some very slight fluctuations but the company has not announced anything.
Why do shares fluctuate like this and who decides the share price?
Thank you.
Newbie warning.
I am watching some ASX shares and they are experiencing some very slight fluctuations but the company has not announced anything.
Why do shares fluctuate like this and who decides the share price?
Thank you.
Ok the mystery deepens, but I am still none the wiser as to who or what makes the changes to the stock price? Is it a computer system or an organisation?
Ok the mystery deepens, but I am still none the wiser as to who or what makes the changes to the stock price? Is it a computer system or an organisation?
... who or what makes the changes to the stock price? ...
Ozi, springhill has given two useful links above.It sounds like you are looking for a fundamental understanding of who, how, where & when stocks are traded.
Try these...
https://www9.asx.com.au/smg/documents/original_lesson_5_st.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Securities_Exchange
Ok the mystery deepens, but I am still none the wiser as to who or what makes the changes to the stock price? Is it a computer system or an organisation?
... it might just simply be two blokes - one of which is right and the other is very wrong ...
Each may have a variety of reasons and it is remotely possible that both are right ((or both are wrong))
Agreed.Even if there are no company specific announcements, there may be macro announcements that affect the company and these will impact on the actions of those active in the stock.
RY, I don't believe I have ever come close to intimating that 'shares generally converge to some concept of long term value'. I am not a 'value investor' and have no idea what 'long term value' would be. I am not clever enough to engage with esoteric calculations or company valuations and am a very simple trend follower which involves nothing more sophisticated than adding to my winners and letting them run, and quickly culling the losers.RoE, Julia and others have mentioned that shares generally converge to some concept of long term value. Long term value is an opinion and there will be a range around anyone's perception of it and perceptions will vary.
Agreed.
RY, I don't believe I have ever come close to intimating that 'shares generally converge to some concept of long term value'. I am not a 'value investor' and have no idea what 'long term value' would be.
This philosophy would seem to be a pretty far distance from any concerns about 'long term value'.
I have no interest in becoming involved in this debate. Just wanted to clarify the above point.
Newbie warning.
I am watching some ASX shares and they are experiencing some very slight fluctuations but the company has not announced anything.
Why do shares fluctuate like this and who decides the share price?
Thank you.
I am coming late to this discussion, but there are a couple of elephants in the room.
1. Analysis of changes in prices of shares shows high variability. Over a period of time the price will move from one level to another. Divide that change by the number of days it took to get a daily average. Similarly compute the standard deviation. The standard deviation of changes in financial prices is very high, relative to the average, for every financial data series.
2. By the fundamentals of value, the price of the shares of a company are the present value of the stream of future dividends, discounted to the present. This is often amended with the addition of prospects for earnings growth, but fundamentalists would say that is already factored into anticipation of future dividend growth.
3. Technical analysts believe that the markets are very nearly efficient. That all fundamental information is discounted by the market and the shares are properly priced at all time.
4. The price of shares of a company are inefficient to the extent that insiders -- people who sit in the corporate board room -- have information that the market has not yet discounted. How they distribute that information, and how they act for their own accounts, contributes to otherwise unexplained price changes.
5. Prices of assets in nearly efficient markets are governed by the same physical and mathematical relationships that govern large amount of small particles -- diffusion. A very large part of the price changes is due to randomness.
6. As mortals, standing outside the board room, we cannot tell which The cause is.
Best regards,
Howard
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