What is a Stock?
When you buy a stock (also called a share), you're buying a tiny piece of ownership in a company. Yes, you become a part-owner of that business!
The Simple Explanation
🍕 The Pizza Analogy
Imagine a pizza cut into 1,000 slices. A company is the whole pizza. When you buy 10 slices (shares), you own 1% of that pizza (company).
If the pizza shop becomes super popular and valuable, your 10 slices are worth more. If it closes down, your slices become worthless.
Real Example:
- Reliance Industries has ~637 crore shares outstanding
- If you buy 100 shares, you own 0.0000016% of Reliance
- Tiny? Yes. But you still own a piece legally!
How Does Owning Stock Make You Money?
Way 1: Capital Appreciation (Price Goes Up)
You buy when cheap, sell when expensive.
Example:
- Buy 10 shares of TCS at ₹3,500 = ₹35,000 invested
- After 3 years, TCS shares = ₹4,500 each
- Sell 10 shares = ₹45,000
- Profit: ₹10,000 (28.6% return)
Way 2: Dividends (Company Shares Profit)
Some companies pay a portion of their profits to shareholders.
Example:
- You own 100 shares of HDFC Bank
- HDFC declares ₹16 dividend per share
- You receive: 100 × ₹16 = ₹1,600 cash in your bank account
Best of Both Worlds
Companies like Infosys, TCS, HDFC give BOTH:
- Share price increases over time
- Regular dividend payments
Types of Stocks
1. Large-Cap Stocks
- Big, established companies
- Examples: Reliance, TCS, HDFC Bank, ITC
- Pros: Stable, safer
- Cons: Slower growth
2. Mid-Cap Stocks
- Medium-sized companies
- Examples: Page Industries, Astral Pipes
- Pros: Growth potential
- Cons: More volatile than large-caps
3. Small-Cap Stocks
- Small companies
- Pros: Massive growth potential (10x, 20x possible)
- Cons: High risk, many fail
📈 Real Success Story
Bajaj Finance (Small-cap in 2010 → Large-cap today)
- 2010 Price: ₹150 per share
- 2024 Price: ₹7,500 per share
- Return: 50x (5,000%!) in 14 years
₹50,000 invested → ₹25 lakhs today!
Why Do Stock Prices Go Up or Down?
Factors Affecting Price
1. Company Performance
- Good quarterly results → Price up
- Losses → Price down
- New product launch → Can go either way
2. Industry Trends
- IT sector booming → IT stocks rise
- Banking crisis → Bank stocks fall
3. Economic Conditions
- GDP growth, inflation, interest rates
- Government policies
4. Market Sentiment
- Fear (COVID crash) → Everything falls
- Greed (bull market) → Everything rises
5. Supply & Demand
- More buyers than sellers → Price up
- More sellers than buyers → Price down
Example: Tesla Stock Movement
| Event | Impact on Price |
|---|---|
| Launched successful Model 3 | +40% |
| Elon Musk smoked weed on podcast | -9% in one day |
| Added to S&P 500 index | +74% |
| Twitter controversy | -50% |
Lesson: Stocks are volatile short-term, but follow company value long-term.
How to Buy Stocks in India
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Open Demat + Trading Account
- Demat = Where sharesare stored (like a bank locker)
- Trading = Where you buy/sell
- Providers: Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, Angel One
Step 2: Complete KYC
- Aadhaar, PAN, bank account
- Takes 24-48 hours
Step 3: Add Money
- Transfer from bank to trading account
Step 4: Buy Stocks
- Search company (e.g., "TCS")
- Enter quantity (e.g., 5 shares)
- Place order
- Stocks credited to demat in 2 days (T+2 settlement)
Costs:
- Brokerage: ₹0-20 per trade
- STT (Securities Transaction Tax): ~0.1% of trade value
- GST: 18% on brokerage
Who Should Buy Individual Stocks?
✅ Buy Stocks If You:
- Enjoy researching companies
- Can handle 30-50% volatility
- Have 5-10 year horizon
- Understand financial statements
❌ Stick to Mutual Funds If You:
- Are a complete beginner
- Don't have time to research
- Want professionals to manage
- Need diversification easily
Truth Bomb: 90% of individual stock investors underperform simple index funds. Why? Because they buy high (in excitement) and sell low (in panic).
Stock Market Timings (India)
- Pre-Open Session: 9:00 AM to 9:15 AM
- Normal Trading: 9:15 AM to 3:30 PM
- Post-Close Session: 3:40 PM to 4:00 PM
Note: You can only place orders during these times on weekdays (Monday-Friday). Markets closed on weekends and public holidays.
Common Stock Terms (Decoded)
Face Value: Original price when company issued shares (usually ₹1, ₹2, ₹10)
Market Price: Current trading price
Market Cap: Share price × Total shares = Company's total value
- Reliance: ₹17 lakh crore market cap
P/E Ratio: Price to Earnings = How expensive the stock is
- P/E of 20 means you pay ₹20 for every ₹1 of company profit
52-Week High/Low: Highest and lowest price in last year
Volume: How many shares traded today
Biggest Mistakes Beginners Make
❌ Mistake 1: "My friend's stock doubled, I'll buy it now"
That's called FOMO. You're buying at the peak!
❌ Mistake 2: "This ₹5 stock will become ₹500"
Penny stocks are mostly garbage. Focus on quality.
❌ Mistake 3: "I'll quit my job and become a day trader"
99% of day traders lose money. Investing ≠ Trading.
❌ Mistake 4: "News said buy, so I bought"
By the time news reaches you, big investors already acted.
❌ Mistake 5: Panic selling in a crash
Biggest wealth destroyer. Markets ALWAYS recover eventually.
7-Day Action Plan
Day 1: Open demat + trading account (Zerodha, Groww, etc.)
Day 2: Complete KYC verification
Day 3: Research 3 large-cap companies you understand (TCS, HDFC, Asian Paints)
Day 4: Read their latest quarterly results (just revenue, profit numbers)
Day 5: Decide to invest in ONE stock OR mutual fund
Day 6: Make your first trade (even 1 share counts!)
Day 7: Set a reminder to check it in 6 months (NOT daily!)
Quiz
Test Your Knowledge
Question 1 of 5
1. When you buy a stock, you become:
💡 Remember: Stocks are pieces of real businesses. Buy good companies, hold for years, ignore daily noise. Patience and quality beat speculation every time.
