business terms
business formats
intro to economics
stock market terms
more stock terms
100

a financial gain, especially the difference between the amount earned and the amount spent in buying, operating, or producing something

profit

100

Business with one person in full control

sole proprietership

100

the total amount of a specific product or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale to consumers at a given price and time

Supply

100

The lowest price a seller will accept for a share

Ask Price

100

a way to check if a stock is "worth" its price, like gauging if it's a good deal.

P/E ratio

200

 the total income a business generates from selling its core products or services before any expenses

revenue

200
Business with 2 owners that share losses and profit

partnership

200

 the stable market state where the quantity of a product or service that consumers demand perfectly matches the quantity producers supply

equilibrium

200

The highest price a buyer will pay for a share

Bid price

200

It shows how much profit the company makes for each share of stock, helping investors see if the company is profitable on a per-share basis.

Earnings per share

300

an individual, organization, or entity that purchases goods, products, or services from a company in exchange for money

customer

300

Business with 1+ members with limited liability meaning that personal assets protected from business debts/lawsuits

Limited Liability company

300

the value of the best alternative you give up when making a choice, representing the potential profit, time, or resources lost from the forgone option

opportunity cost

300

when stock prices are falling, and investors expect more declines

Bear market

300

a portion of a company's profits that gets paid out to its shareholders.

Dividends

400

any individual, company, or entity that transfers or agrees to transfer ownership of goods, services, or property to a buyer in exchange for money

seller

400

business with unlimited share holders

C corporation

400

any amount of an asset, resource, or income that exceeds what is needed

surplus

400

When stock prices are rising, and investors are optimistic

Bull market

400

 when a private company sells shares of itself to the general public for the very first time

Initial public offering

500

the direct cost of producing or acquiring the products a company sells, including raw materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead

COGS

500

Business with up to 100 shareholders with strict rules

S corporation

500

a market condition where the quantity of a product or resource demanded by consumers exceeds the available supply at the current price, leading to unmet needs

shortage

500

profit from selling a stock for more than you paid

capital gain

500

spreading investments across various companies, industries, sizes (market caps), and geographic regions to reduce risk

Diversification

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