Many different factors affect share prices. A few key factors tend to play a more important role in determining the value of a share than others. Generally speaking, the following are the four factors that you should watch most closely:
- Earnings and other fundamentals
- Dividends
- Economic announcements
- General shifts in market/sector strength
Earnings and Other Fundamental Numbers
Company performance is a major driving force behind share prices. After all, when you buy a share you are buying a piece of the company which gives you the right to participate in its successes and failures. Naturally, if a company is performing well then more and more traders will be interested in buying that company's share. This will increase demand for the share and generally drive its price higher. If a company is performing poorly, however, fewer and fewer traders will be interested in buying that company's share. This will decrease demand for the share and generally drive its price lower.
When determining how well a company is performing, traders and analysts will look at various fundamental numbers (i.e. numbers derived from a company's balance sheet and income statement). Company earnings - the amount of money a company makes after it has paid all of its expenses - is typically the most important fundamental number that traders look at. However, there are other fundamental numbers such as the return on equity (ROE) and the price-to-book ratio that give traders an indication of the overall health of a company. You will learn more about company fundamentals in a later section.
Dividends
Companies can do one of two things when they make money: they can keep it and reinvest it in the company or they can pay it out to shareholders in the form of a dividend. Dividends are cash payments made to shareholders based on the number of shares owned. For example if a company with 1,000,000 shares issued paid a ВЈ5,000,000 dividend, each shareholder would receive ВЈ5 per share.
Traders place tremendous value on dividends because they know they will be receiving regular cash payments on their investments. Because dividends are prized so highly, a company can typically increase the value of its shares by paying a larger dividend (as long as the company's profits are growing as well). Shares from companies with increasing dividends generally enjoy price increases, while shares from companies with decreasing dividends generally see price decreases. Unfortunately fewer and fewer companies are actually paying dividends nowadays, choosing instead to keep the money in retained earnings to reinvest in the company.
Economic Announcements
Economic announcements are those announcements released by governments and other large groups regarding information that affect the economy as a whole, not just individual companies. This includes announcements such as interest-rate statements and gross domestic product (GDP).
Most of the economic news that is going to be important to you as a share and CFD trader is scheduled months in advance. For instance you will know a year in advance when the U.S. Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is going to be meeting to discuss interest rate changes. Likewise in the UK the government's budgets and mini-budgets are scheduled well in advance of the actual event. This gives you plenty of time to research the likely content of announcements and position your portfolio accordingly.
Saxo provides an up-to-the-minute economic calendar so you can know exactly what news is scheduled to be released today, tomorrow and into the future (see Figure 6).
Figure 6 - Economic Calendar
A quick glance at the economic calendar lets you know about important upcoming events that have the potential to change or accelerate the movement of the currency pairs you are watching. These events might include announcements involving German unemployment data, U.K. money supply and U.S. gross domestic product (GDP).
Investment analysts, economists and other market participants are constantly analyzing upcoming economic announcements, trying to determine ahead of time what the news is going to be. Whilst no two analysts will arrive exactly the same conclusion, if you look across the various estimates you can determine what the average estimate is. This average estimate is also known as the "consensus estimate."
Knowing what this consensus estimate is will help you to take advantage of price movements once the economic announcement is released, because the consensus estimate will already be "priced in" to the value of the shares and CFDs you are watching. Here's how it works.
Once investors complete their analyses they start placing their trades to take advantage of where they believe currencies are going to move in the future. They don't wait until the announcement comes out. They want to be ahead of the market. So, by the time an economic announcement is released, most of the major market participants have already placed their trades.
If an economic announcement is released, and the number matches the consensus estimate, share and CFD prices will most likely not move very much. Since most of the big traders have already placed their trades, there are no new traders to jump in and move the shares and CFDs. If, however, the actual number from the economic announcement is higher or lower than the consensus estimate, the price of shares and CFDs will have to adjust either up or down to factor in the new economic information.
During this time, when market participants are scrambling to factor in the new information, you have an excellent opportunity to take advantage of the price movement.
General Shifts in Market/Sector Strength
Companies would like to think that their corporate performance is the only thing that should be driving their share price. Unfortunately for them, other forces in the general market can lift or lower share values regardless of what is happening within specific companies.
There's an old adage that every share and CFD trader ought to know: "A rising tide floats all boats." This means that when you are in a bullish market most shares are going to be going up because the market and the economy in general are going up and growing. On the other hand it also means that when you are in a bearish market most shares are going to be going down because the market and the economy in general are going down or shrinking.
Just as the market in general can be moving higher or lower, certain sectors within the market can also be moving higher or lower. For instance, healthcare shares may be moving higher at the same time retail shares may be moving lower. Bullish and bearish forces within individual sectors can have the same impact on the shares within those sectors as bullish and bearish forces can have on the overall market.
You will learn more about analyzing market and sector trends in a later section. At this point simply knowing that these forces exist most likely puts you well ahead of the majority of retail traders.