The Stock and CFD Markets
The global financial markets have never been so vibrant and alive, and they have never been so accessible to
you as an individual investor. You are in a unique position. Never before have individual investors, like you,
had access to everything they needed to be successful on their own in the global financial markets. Now you do.
Both the stock and contract for difference (CFD) markets are exciting markets that give individual investors,
like you, access to the world's stock markets with an exciting level of leverage and flexibility.
Let's take a look at the basics of how each of these markets work. We'll start with
the stock market and then take a look at the CFD market.
The Stock Market
Investors trade stocks - shares of ownership in a company - through stock exchanges.
Before the rise of the Internet, stock exchanges were physical trading floors where
investors, or their brokers, could get together and negotiate prices for the stocks
they were looking to buy and sell. While many of these physical exchanges, like the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the London Stock Exchange (LSE) still exist,
new Internet-based stock exchanges, like the NASDAQ, have developed.
Regardless of whether the stock transactions take place on a live trading floor
or in cyberspace, the important thing for you as an investor is that there is
a place where you can buy and sell your stocks.
Why would you want to buy and sell stocks instead of simply buying and holding stocks?
Investors buy and sell stocks based on their belief of what the price of the stock is
going to do in the future. If they believe the price of the stock is going to go higher,
they buy the stock. If they believe the price of the stock is going to go lower, they sell the stock.
Why Stock Prices Go Up and Down
Companies are in business to make a profit. You don't have to get any more
complicated than that. Companies want to make a profit. When companies do make a profit,
managers either reinvest the money back into the business for future growth or they
distribute the money to the owners of the business. As you just learned, you are
buying ownership in a company when you buy stock, which means managers would be
distributing money to you. These cash distributions to stock holders are called dividends.
Companies that are growing and generating more and more profits tend to have stock
prices that move higher and higher. Companies that are not growing and are not
generating more and more profits tend to have stock prices that move lower and lower.
As a stock investor, however, you cannot simply look at how well a company is performing
today when you are choosing which stocks to buy and which stocks to sell. Investors are
most interested in what they believe the company will do tomorrow, next month and next
year. If they believe the company will continue to grow and generate profits, they
will buy the stock. If, on the other hand, they believe the company will not
continue to grow and generate profits as it has done in the past, they will sell the stock.
Now that you have a basic understanding of the stock market, let's take a look at the CFD market.
What is a CFD?
A CFD, or contract for difference, is a contract that rises or declines in value
as the stock on which the contract is based rises or declines in value.
Why the Value of CFDs Goes Up and Down
A CFD gains or loses value as the difference between the price of the stock when
you bought the CFD and the current price of the stock fluctuates. For example,
if you buy a CFD that is based on a share of Microsoft (MSFT) stock, and the share
of stock rises in value, the value of your CFD will also rise. Conversely, if you
buy a CFD that is based on a share of MSFT stock, and the share of stock declines
in value, the value of your CFD will also decline. The value of the CFD is directly
tied to the price of the stock, which is why you must understand why stocks move
before you invest in CFDs.
Leverage in the CFD Market
If the value of a CFD is directly tied to the value of the underlying stock, why
not just trade the stock? Why would you want to trade CFDs instead? The answer:
leverage. When you trade CFDs, you can use leverage to enhance your investing returns.
When you buy a stock, you have to pay the full price of the stock. If the stock is
trading at $25, you must pay $25 for the stock. If the stock is trading at $100,
you must pay $100 for the stock. When you buy a CFD, on the other hand, you only
have to pay a portion of the total price of the stock - sometimes as little as 5 percent.
Leverage enhances your profits, but it can also enhance your losses. Imagine you
buy a CFD on a stock that trades for $50, but you only have to set aside $5 for
the CFD because you are taking advantage of leverage and can pay as little as 10
percent on this particular stock. Now imagine that the value of the stock increases
10 percent, from $50 to $55. How does this affect your CFD trade? Remember, a CFD
is a contract for difference so you make the difference between $50 and $55 - which is $5.
If you had bought the stock, you would have made a 10 percent profit ($5 / $50 = 10%).
However, since you bought the CFD instead and only had to set aside $5 to enter the trade,
you made a 100 percent profit ($5 / $5 = 100%).
While this is a tremendous return, you have to remember that leverage can also
work against you. If you had entered this same CFD trade and the stock had
declined $5, from $50 to $45, instead of rising, you would have lost a larger
portion of your investment as well. If you had bought the stock, you would have
suffered a 10 percent loss (-$5 / $50 = -10%). Whereas, since you bought the
CFD and only had to set aside $5 to enter the trade, you would have lost
100 percent of your investment (-$5 / $5 = -100%).
Leverage is an incredible tool. Use it wisely.
Getting Started
Thousands of investors, just like you, are taking advantage of the profit potential
of the stock and CFD markets. The basic concepts are simple to grasp - when companies perform well,
their stock price goes up, and when companies perform poorly, their stock price goes down.
Along with stocks, CFDs offer incredible flexibility to you as an individual investor.
Once you understand what drives the stock market, all you have to do is open a trading
account, do your research and click a few buttons in your online trading station. Then
sit back and monitor your trades. It may take a little practice, but before long, you'll
be making money like a seasoned professional. Start letting your money work for you.
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