Stock Market Basics
Econonomics
Financial Instruments
Risk and Diversification
Financial Ratios
100

What does it mean to buy a stock?

You are buying partial ownership in a company.


100

What is Opportunity Cost?

The value of the next best alternative you give up when making a choice,

100

partial ownership share in a company, and you can earn money through dividends or price appreciation

Stock

100

What is diversification?

Spreading investments across different assets.


100

a key financial metric showing a company's profit allocated to each outstanding share



Earnings-Per-Share Ratio (EPS)

200

What is the biggest difference between the NYSE and NASDAQ?

NYSE is a physical exchange and NASDAQ is fully electronic

200

What is the graph showing the trade-offs between producing two goods, like butter and guns.

Production Possibilities Frontier

200

A collection of many different stocks, bonds, or other assets, managed professionally.




Mutual Fund


200

Why is investing all your money into one stock risky?

One loss can wipe out your portfolio.


200

a financial metric comparing a company's market value to its book value (assets minus liabilities)

Price-to-Book Ratio (P/B)

300

What happens to a stock’s price when demand exceeds supply?

The price rises.


300

The fundamental economic problem where wants are unlimited but resources are not.

Scarcity

300

This common financial instrument is essentially a loan an investor makes to a company or government entity that pays interest over a set period


Bonds

300

What is a stop-loss order?

 An automatic sell to limit losses.


300

What does the P/E ratio compare?

Stock price to earnings per share.


400

What is an IPO?

When a private company first sells shares to the public.


400

a theory in finance stating that asset prices fully reflect all available information, making it impossible to consistently "beat the market" through skill or analysis

Efficient Markets Hypothesis

400

This type of retirement account allows your investments to grow tax-deferred until you withdraw them in retirement, at which point they are taxed as income.

Traditional IRA

400

an instruction to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better, giving investors control over trade execution and price protection, unlike a market order that executes immediately at the current price.

A limit order

400

The real value of an asset based on fundamental factors, as opposed to the price assigned by the market.

Intrinsic Value

500

What does market capitalization measure?

A company’s total value (price × shares outstanding).

500

This specific economic condition occurs when a country experiences both stagnant economic growth (high unemployment) and high inflation simultaneously

Stagflation

500

A retirement savings plan where you contribute after-tax money, allowing your investments to grow and be withdrawn tax-free in retirement

Roth IRA
500

A key financial metric that measures an investment's risk-adjusted return, showing how much excess return (above a risk-free rate) you receive for the extra volatility (risk) taken on; a higher ratio indicates better performance

Sharpe Ratio

500

a valuation method that estimates an investment's current worth by projecting its future cash flows and bringing them back to their present-day value

Discounted-Cash-Flow (DCF)

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