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Financial Page

One of the funny things about the stock market is that every time one person buys, another sells, and both think they are astute. Stock market is a general term used to refer to organized trading of securities. It can be an actual place, like a stock exchange, but nowadays trade is less and less linked to such a physical place, as modern markets are electronic networks. Big companies usually issue shares on the major stock exchanges (which are a primary market of their share issue), while smaller companies usually join some type of over-the-counter (OTC) market, i.e. market on which shares are sold after they have been issued on primary market and which is conducted over the telephone or electronically.

Stock market index is a listing of stocks of large companies, and a statistic reflecting the market capitalization value of its component stocks, all of which have some things in common such as trading on the same stock exchange, belonging to the same industry, or having similar market characteristics. The most regularly quoted market indices are the American Dow Jones and S&P, the British FTSE 100, the Japanese NIKKEI 225, the Hong Kong Hang Seng, etc. The official index of the Zagreb Stock Exchange is CROBEX.

Columns High/Low show the highest and lowest prices (in pence) for the shares during the current year. For example, the highest price at which Unilever’s shares were bought and sold was 712 and the lowest price was 400 pence. Stock is the name of the share. Price shows the price of the share as it stood at the close of business the previous day. Change shows how much the closing price of the share changed in comparison with the previous day’s closing price. For example, Unilever closed 15 pence higher than the previous day. Yield shows how much shareholders can expect to receive as a dividend, in pence, for every £1 invested (based on the current share price). Price – Earnings ratio (P/E) refers to the present market price of a company share divided by the earnings per share for the previous year.

In order not to be too boring, journalists invented various ways of saying that prices are going up or down. Here are some examples. Boeing stocks rocketed after rumours of a merger with another leading aircraft manufacturer. Exxon stocks shot up after a new deal to pump Siberian natural gas was announced. Grundig shares slipped after the news of boardroom changes. In Paris, the CAC-40 rallied after the unions called for a three-day general strike next week. Procter & Gamble stocks plunged after it was revealed that the company had lost over $100 million as a result of derivative deal. Share prices were steady in Hong Kong today, the Hang Seng finishing up ten points. Philip Morris also dipped, down 75 cents to $52. Silver was steady at $600.36 an ounce. Share prices soared on the news of the takeover bid.