---
title: "What is the Stock Market?"
description: "What is the stock market? An explanation of investing for novices and newcomers to the world of trading public stocks."
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-the-stock-market
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/what-is-the-stock-market.md
published: 2013-09-05
last_updated: 2017-06-12
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# What is the Stock Market?

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-the-stock-market
Updated: 2017-06-12
Imagine you've started a business. It's the best lemonade stand in all of
the United States. You're making money every summer selling iced lemonade, and
you've figured out how to sell hot lemonade tea every winter. You're rolling in
profits.

With the money you make from your first stand, you open another one across
town. It does great business too, so you expand to the next town and the next.
Before you know it, you're in several states and you're looking at Alaska and
Hawaii.

## What is Stock?

Imagine someone comes to you and tells you that you can double the size of
your business by expanding into Canada. Maybe you don't know how to sell warm
lemonade to Canadians (they love it), but they're willing to help—if you
sell part of your business to them. If they do the hard work and put up the
initial money to build the lemonade stands, they're entitled to part of the
profit. You supply the blueprints for the lemonade stands *and* the
business in general, and they build the businesses.

Guess what? You've sold stock in your business. Stock is a portion of
ownership of a company.

To make this work, you had to figure out what your company is worth. That's
a tough problem, but set it aside for a second. You figured out what your
business is worth and you sold a percentage of that business—part of your
ownership of this lemonade empire—to other investors. They now own part
of the company and so do you. Whatever profit you make that you don't turn
around and invest back in the business belongs to all of you owners of the
company, in proportion to the amount of the company you each own.

## What is a Market?

In a few years, your Canadian friends decide to retire to a beach in the
Caribbean tax haven of the Cayman Islands. They offer to sell you back their
stock. You can choose to buy it at its current value. You could decline, and
they'd have to find another buyer to buy it.

How do you know what to buy it for? There's a negotiation. If it's you
buying it, that's one thing. If it's another private group, that's another.
Alternately, you could take the offer of shares to a larger group of potential
buyers and take bids for it. At its heart, a market is a place where buyers and
sellers come together to negotiate a price for goods that they want to buy and
sell.

## What is an IPO?

Suppose you've sold off hundreds of pieces of the company to many, many
people. Maybe you've hit up family and friends to help you invest to expand
into Mexico and Europe and Brazil and India and China.

Maybe your little lemonade stand business has grown so large that it's too
big for you to manage. You need to bring in a professional management team, and
the only way to justify all of the work you're doing is to raise enough money
to you can expand the business into a worldwide year-round lemonade
company.

One way to do this is to allow the general public to buy shares of your
company. This generally occurs through an IPO (Initial Public Offering).  An
IPO is an event where banks work with the owners of the company (the
shareholders) to figure out what the company is worth and how many shares of
the company are available for average people like the rest of us to buy.  Then,
one fateful day, anyone can call up his or her [broker](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker) and ask to buy shares of your lemonade
company.

The company ideally gets a new influx of capital, the owners of the company
probably get a big paycheck, and hundreds or thousands or hundreds of thousands
of people now own tiny chunks of that company you started, and they're all
entitled to a small piece of the profits of the company—so you'd better
get to work figuring out new markets and new products and new customers!

(The question of [whether you should participate in an IPO as a buyer](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/happily-ignoring-ipos) is a very different one.)

## What is the Stock Market?

A market is any place where buyers and sellers come together. A stock market
is a place where *many* buyers and sellers of *many* stocks come
together. Once your company has gone public—once any member of the
general public can buy it or sell it—then those owners of the company can
buy and sell their shares any time they want, as long as they all agree on a
few things, like what to call it and what it's worth and where to record the
transactions.

Once you have hundreds or thousands or hundreds of thousands of tiny owners,
you have to keep things orderly. You're under oversight of agencies such as the
[Securities and Exchange Commission](https://www.sec.gov/) and must
follow specific accounting and reporting guidelines. Buying and selling is
regulated because you're affecting millions of people. That's why a stock
exchange like the [NYSE](https://www.nyse.com/index) or the [NASDAQ](http://www.nasdaq.com/) exists: to organize everything.

There's no one single stock market, though in the days of [electronic trading](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker) it hardly matters
to the average investor anymore. It's like the little farmer's market where you
first set up your stall to sell freshly-squeezed lemonade, except it's a lot
larger and computerized and people buy and sell tiny pieces of countless
companies, not lemonade and fresh tomatoes and homemade pies.

The stock market is a convenient way to make all of these transactions
happen in an orderly fashion where we can all agree on the results. That's the
basic fact you have to remember. There are many, many more details, but for
most of us most of the time, it's not much more complicated than that.
