the price will be in pennies going from 99 to 1pence. after that the company will be insolvent.
then the price goes up
when supply goes down the price goes up>
demand goes down
the price goes down
The price goes down, and the quantity supplied goes up
If the price of a stock that you own shares of goes down, the value of your investment is going to decrease.
Yes, and it's massive. If you buy a call, the option exercises if the stock price is higher than the strike price. If this happens, you resell the stock and keep the profit. If you sell a put, the option exercises if the stock price is below the strike price. If this happens, you bury the stock in the back yard until the price goes back up.
Nothing. Once you enter into a put contract, the strike price remains the same. If the stock price goes over the strike price and stays there until expiration, you just let the put expire.
If the Sensex goes up, it means that the prices of the stocks of most of the companies under the BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange) Sensex (30 companies) have gone up. If the Sensex goes down, this tells you that the stock price of most of the major stocks on the BSE have gone down. Simlpe! :)
The price of the stock of General Electric Company varies from time to time. Sometimes it goes up while other times it goes down. The current price of the stock is ranging between $22.95 to $23.24.
then the price goes up
people buy and sell stocks If a lot of people want to buy a particular stock then the price goes up on the other hand if a lot of people want to sell a stock the price goes down.
Actually nobody. The price of a company's share is determined by the demand and supply theory and not by any individual. During an IPO, the price is determined by the lead underwriters to the IPO issue. But once the stock gets listed, the demand and supply drives the price of the stock. If a stock has heavy demand and limited supply, the price of the stock goes up. Similarly if a stock has little demand and heavy supply, the price goes down.
when supply goes down the price goes up>
The discount goes up, the sale price goes down.
If your stock volume has risen recently that means that there is a lot of trade activity currently going on with your stock. If it goes down it means the opposite and the price of your stock is staying the same.
What happens is the put writer gets hosed. If a company goes into Chapter 7 bankruptcy, all its stock becomes worthless. Unfortunately for the people who wrote put options on the company's stock, those do NOT become worthless. If the put buyer decides to exercise the option - and he will - the writer has to buy all those shares of worthless stock at the strike price.