The stock market can feel like a casino full of flashing numbers and shouting men in suits. It isn't. Underneath the noise, how stocks work is surprisingly simple: you buy a small piece of a real company and share in its success.
Let's break down how stocks work, how you actually make money, and how to start.
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How Stocks Work: You Own a Slice of a Company
A stock is a share of ownership in a company.
Think of a company as a pie. It can be sliced into as many pieces as the company wants. Each slice is a share. Buy a share, and you own that slice of the business.
This is why stocks are also called equities - equity means ownership. When you hold shares, you're a part-owner, entitled to a piece of the company's profits and growth.
So when people say "I own Apple stock," they really mean "I own a tiny slice of Apple." That's how stocks work at the core.
Why Companies Sell Stock in the First Place
Companies don't give away ownership for fun. They sell shares to raise money.
Imagine you build a business and want to grow but need cash. You can slice off pieces of your company and sell them to investors. Early on, that money comes from private backers. Eventually, a company may go public so anyone can buy in, through an initial public offering, or IPO.
That's the moment a private company becomes a public one. Companies go public to raise money, gain credibility, and let early owners cash out part of their stake.
Once public, the company's shares trade on the stock market, where investors like you buy and sell them.
How You Make Money When You Own Stocks
There are two main ways stocks pay you.
1. Appreciation. This is the share price rising. Buy a stock at $5, watch it grow to $150 over years, and your slice is worth far more. You can sell it for a profit. There's no guarantee any stock rises, but over the long run, quality companies tend to grow.
2. Cash flow through dividends. Some companies share their profits directly with shareholders. These payments are called dividends - a little thank-you for owning the stock.
A company like 3M shows both at once: over two decades its share price climbed steadily while its dividend kept rising. Owners won twice. Dividends aren't guaranteed, but when they come, they pay you just for holding the shares.
The Stock Terms You Need to Know
A handful of words unlock how stocks work day to day.
| Term | Plain-English meaning |
|---|---|
| Share | One slice of ownership |
| Ticker symbol | The company's market code, like AAPL for Apple |
| Equity | Ownership in a company |
| Shares outstanding | Total number of slices in existence |
| Market capitalization | What the whole company is worth |
One trap to avoid: a $100 share price doesn't mean a company is more valuable than one at $10. What matters is the market cap, the value of the entire pie - not the price of a single slice. For more, our stock market terms glossary has the full list.
How Stock Prices Move
Share prices rise and fall as investors buy and sell, based on what they think a company is worth.
That's why a stock can drop on bad news and jump on good news. Some of it reflects real changes in the business. A lot of it is short-term emotion.
The smart move is to ask a simple question when a stock moves: is this real news about the business, or just noise? Major company problems - falling earnings, a leadership shakeup, a broken business model - matter. A single so-so quarter or a scary headline often doesn't. Knowing the difference is the heart of when to sell a stock.
How to Start Investing in Stocks
You don't need millions, or even thousands. You can begin with $100 or less.
For most beginners, the simplest approach isn't picking individual stocks at all. It's buying into the whole market through a low-cost index fund. A fund tracking the S&P 500 gives you a slice of 500 major companies at once, so the winners balance out the losers.
A proven plan:
- Open a brokerage account.
- Choose a broad, low-cost fund.
- Invest a fixed amount on a regular schedule (this is called dollar cost averaging).
- Keep going for years, not months.
That patient, automated habit is how ordinary people build real wealth. Historically, just $100 a month into the S&P 500 could grow into a millionaire's nest egg over a working lifetime. Our guide to how to start investing walks through the first steps.
The bottom line on how stocks work: a stock is ownership in a business. You profit when that business grows and when it pays you dividends. Focus on quality, think long term, and let time and compounding do the heavy lifting. As you go, you'll want to understand the difference between stocks and bonds and the basics of assets that build wealth.
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