Stock FAQs

what many people sell stock what happens to the price

by Enola Kling Published 2 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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What happens to the stock price when you sell shares?

Depending on how much volume there is on the shares of the company you're selling, and depending on whether there are more buyers than sellers at the moment, your share sell order may be filled at market by a market maker with no real consequence to the share's price.

Will the price of a stock go up or down?

A very general answer, all other things being equal, the price will move down. However there is nothing general. It depends on total number of shares in market and total turn over for that specific shares.

How much does it cost to sell 200 shares of stock?

Assume someone is selling 200 shares at $90.22. If someone buys those 200 shares at $90.22, a transaction occurs, and those 200 shares become unavailable. The following offer may be to sell 100 shares at $90.24.

Does the money go to the person who buys the stock?

It doesn't go to the person who buys the stock from you. For example, let's say you were thinking of buying a stock at $15, and before you decide to buy it, the stock falls to $10 per share.

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What happens to stock prices when everyone sells?

If everyone were to sell, there is no market in that stock (or other assets) anymore until sellers and buyers find a price they are willing to transact at. When a stock is falling it does not mean there are no buyers. The stock market works on the economic concepts of supply and demand.

Does stock price go down when people sell?

Stock prices go up and down based on supply and demand. When people want to buy a stock versus sell it, the price goes up. If people want to sell a stock versus buying it, the price goes down.

How do they decide at what price to sell their stock?

After a company goes public, and its shares start trading on a stock exchange, its share price is determined by supply and demand for its shares in the market. If there is a high demand for its shares due to favorable factors, the price will increase.

What happens when sell stock?

A buyer bids to purchase shares at a specified price (or at the best available price) and a seller asks to sell the stock at a specified price (or at the best available price). When a bid and an ask match, a transaction occurs and both orders will be filled.

Why does price drop when people sell?

If more people want to buy a stock (demand) than sell it (supply), then the price moves up. Conversely, if more people wanted to sell a stock than buy it, there would be greater supply than demand, and the price would fall.

Do you owe money if stock goes down?

If you invest in stocks with a cash account, you will not owe money if a stock goes down in value. The value of your investment will decrease, but you will not owe money. If you buy stock using borrowed money, you will owe money no matter which way the stock price goes because you have to repay the loan.

What happens if no one sells a stock?

When no one sells stock there will be no trading volume, so stock price will remain same.

When should you sell a stock?

Investors might sell a stock if it's determined that other opportunities can earn a greater return. If an investor holds onto an underperforming stock or is lagging the overall market, it may be time to sell that stock and put the money to work in another investment.

How do share prices go up?

Prices rise when there are buyers banging on the door for those shares. Without buyers a share's price will fall. The more buyers there are to create demand, the higher a share price will go. A number of factors trigger this interest – each signalling to investors that this is a share they really want to be holding.

Who buys stock when everyone is selling?

If you are wondering who would want to buy stocks when the market is going down, the answer is: a lot of people. Some shares are picked up through options and some are picked up through money managers that have been waiting for a strike price.

Who pays you when you sell a stock?

When you sell your stocks, the two sides to the trade -- you the seller and the buyer -- must each fulfil his side of the deal. You must deliver the stock shares and the buyer must give the money to pay for the shares to his broker.

Who buys the stock you sell?

Institutions, market specialists or makers, corporate traders or individual traders may buy your stocks when you sell them.

How are stocks bought and sold?

The way stocks are bought and sold is through companies known as "market makers". These are entities which sit between the markets and you (and your broker), and when you want to buy or sell a stock, most of the time the order is ultimately handled somewhere along the line by a market maker.

Who decides what a stock will buy or sell?

It might surprise you to know that it is the market makers, not the markets, that decide what a stock will buy or sell for. Each market maker sets their own prices for what they'll pay to buy from sellers for, and what they'll sell it to buyers for. This is called, respectively, the "bid" and the "ask" prices.

What does it mean when you are shown the highest bid price?

What that means is, you are being shown the highest "bid" price (what you can sell your shares for) and the best "ask" price (what you can buy those shares for) because that's what is required. That being said, there are many other market makers on the same stock whose bid prices are lower and ask prices are higher.

What is trading computer?

Trading computers are taught to seek out the best prices and the fastest trade fills they can. The point to this very simplistic lesson is that the market makers set the prices that shares trade at. They adjust those prices based (among other factors) on how much buying and selling volume they're seeing.

How much swing is a stock suspended from trading?

Every stock exchange has rules that would determine when a particular stock would be suspended from trading, generally a 10-20% swing [either ways]. Generally highly liquid stock or stock during initial listing are exempt from such limits as they are left to arrive the market price ... A large sell order may or may not swing ...

Can you sell a block of shares at market?

Depending on how much volume there is on the shares of the company you're selling, and depending on whether there are more buyers than sellers at the moment, your share sell order may be filled at market by a market maker with no real consequence to the share's price. If the block is large enough then it's possible it will not all sell ...

Can a large sell order be suspended?

A large sell order may or may not swing the price for it to get suspended. At times even a small order may do ... again it is specific to a particular stock. The volume required to significantly move the price of a security depends completely on the orderbook for that particular security.

What happens when a buyer bids and asks?

When a bid and an ask match, a transaction occurs and both orders will be filled.

What is a specialist stock broker?

The specialist facilitates the trading of a given stock and maintains a fair and orderly market. 1  If necessary, the specialist will use his or her own inventory to meet the demands of the trade orders.

What are the primary sources used in Investopedia?

These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts.

Is the NYSE a physical exchange?

Updated Nov 13, 2018. Most stocks are traded on physical or virtual exchanges. The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), for example, is a physical exchange where some trades are placed manually on a trading floor —yet, other trading activity is conducted electronically. 1  NASDAQ, on the other hand, is a fully electronic exchange where all trading ...

Why does the stock price go up?

If the plan is to buy assets or even another company and the acquisitions will significantly increase profitability, the stock price should go up. If the company is raising capital without a viable plan for the use of the money, the investing public may sell of shares, driving down the stock price.

What do investors want to know when a company issues shares to raise capital?

What investors want to know when a company issues shares to raise capital is what will the company do with that money to increase shareholder value. Typically, when money is raised by issuing shares, the company will provide an explanation of its plans for the additional capital. If the plan is to buy assets or even another company and the acquisitions will significantly increase profitability, the stock price should go up. If the company is raising capital without a viable plan for the use of the money, the investing public may sell of shares, driving down the stock price.

What happens when you dilute a share?

When new shares are issued, this commonly results in share dilution. Simply put, diluting a share can quickly cause a drop in per-share value. This is just one possible outcome, however.

Is it positive or negative to issue shares?

However, since the price of a stock in the market is based on investor expectations, issuing new shares may be viewed as a positive or a negative for the share price -- or even both -- depending on an investor's time frame.

What happens if you buy a stock for $10 and sell it for $5?

If you purchase a stock for $10 and sell it for only $5, you will lose $5 per share. It may feel like that money must go to someone else, but that isn't exactly true. It doesn't go to the person who buys the stock from you.

What happens when investors perceive a stock?

When investor perception of a stock diminishes, so does the demand for the stock, and, in turn, the price. So faith and expectations can translate into cold hard cash, but only because of something very real: the capacity of a company to create something, whether it is a product people can use or a service people need.

How is value created or dissolved?

On the one hand, value can be created or dissolved with the change in a stock's implicit value, which is determined by the personal perceptions and research of investors and analysts.

What happens when a stock tumbles?

When a stock tumbles and an investor loses money, the money doesn't get redistributed to someone else. Essentially, it has disappeared into thin air, reflecting dwindling investor interest and a decline in investor perception of the stock. That's because stock prices are determined by supply and demand and investor perception of value and viability.

What is implicit value in stocks?

Depending on investors' perceptions and expectations for the stock, implicit value is based on revenues and earnings forecasts. If the implicit value undergoes a change—which, really, is generated by abstract things like faith and emotion—the stock price follows.

What is short selling?

Short Selling. There are investors who place trades with a broker to sell a stock at a perceived high price with the expectation that it'll decline. These are called short-selling trades. If the stock price falls, the short seller profits by buying the stock at the lower price–closing out the trade.

What does it mean when a company is in a bull market?

In a bull market, there is an overall positive perception of the market's ability to keep producing and creating.

Why is there always a buyer?

Most of us trade stock using an online broker app or website. You get the largest market with the greatest number of participants when you are buying or selling stocks during the regular trading day.

When there are no buyers

It is rare, but especially during times of crisis, there may not be any buyers. That is when you'll see stock prices fall extremely quickly because existing sellers are willing to sell at any price.

Why others buy stock when you sell

Each of us has different investing goals and investment plans. You may be saving for retirement while someone else is day trading stocks. Or you're an institutional investor managing a billion-dollar pension. Different goals mean different motivations and actions.

They have regularly scheduled investments

There are investors who have regularly scheduled investments, such as a retirement account contribution each paycheck. This approach is an investment strategy known as dollar cost averaging.

They are buying the dip

There are a lot of reasons why a stock price might drop, such as a surprising earnings miss or a broad market correction, but some investors believe in a strategy known as “buying the dip.” If you feel that the market over corrected, you might want to be buying shares.

They have limit buy orders

One investing website maintains an annual Buy List of companies with an updated "Buy Below" prices. It adjusts those prices but believes that a company is worth accumulating if their prices fall below this "Buy Below" price.

They are covering short sales

If you were selling your shares after a drop in price, you might be selling it to someone who believed a drop was coming.

Learn why the stock market and individual stocks tend to fluctuate and how you can use that information to become a better investor

Tim writes about technology and consumer goods stocks for The Motley Fool. He's a value investor at heart, doing his best to avoid hyped-up nonsense. Follow him on Twitter: Follow @TMFBargainBin

What affects stock price?

High demand for a stock drives the stock price higher, but what causes that high demand in the first place? It's all about how investors feel:

The big picture is what matters

Long-term investors, like those of us at The Motley Fool, don't much care about the short-term developments that push stock prices up and down each trading day. When you have years or even decades to let your money grow, analyst reports and earnings beats are often fleeting and irrelevant.

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