JoshTest / knowledge_base /trading_basics.txt
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# Trading Fundamentals in the TradeVerse
## Basic Trading Actions
### BUY
Purchasing shares of a company. You believe the price will increase.
- Profit when price goes up
- Loss when price goes down
- Requires available capital
### SELL
Selling shares you own. You want to lock in gains or cut losses.
- Converts shares back to capital
- Realizes any profit or loss
- Reduces exposure to that company
### HOLD
Keeping your current position unchanged. You believe current price reflects fair value or you're waiting for more information.
- No transaction costs
- Maintains current exposure
- Appropriate when uncertain
## Fundamental Analysis Concepts
### Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio
Compares stock price to company earnings. Higher P/E suggests investors expect growth. Lower P/E might indicate undervaluation or problems.
### Debt-to-Equity Ratio
Measures financial leverage. Lower is generally safer. High debt increases risk during downturns.
### Dividend Yield
Annual dividend divided by stock price. Higher yields provide income but may indicate limited growth.
### Revenue Growth
Year-over-year increase in sales. Consistent growth suggests healthy business.
### Profit Margins
Percentage of revenue converted to profit. Higher margins indicate competitive advantages.
## Risk Factors to Consider
### Company-Specific Risks
- Management changes
- Product failures
- Legal issues
- Competitive pressure
- Financial distress
### Sector Risks
- Regulatory changes
- Technology disruption
- Commodity price swings
- Consumer preference shifts
### Market Risks
- Interest rate changes
- Economic recession
- Geopolitical events
- Market sentiment shifts
## Red Flags to Watch
### Insider Selling
When executives sell large amounts of stock, they may know something negative that isn't public yet.
### Unusual Trading Volume
Sudden spikes in trading volume without news may indicate information leakage.
### Accounting Irregularities
Frequent restatements, auditor changes, or complex financial structures warrant caution.
### Executive Turnover
Rapid changes in leadership, especially CFO departures, can signal problems.
### Related Party Transactions
Deals with entities connected to management may not be in shareholders' interest.
## Positive Indicators
### Insider Buying
Executives purchasing shares with their own money suggests confidence.
### Institutional Accumulation
Major investors increasing positions indicates professional confidence.
### Earnings Beats
Consistently exceeding analyst expectations suggests strong execution.
### Market Share Gains
Taking business from competitors indicates competitive strength.
### Innovation Pipeline
Strong R&D and new product launches support future growth.
## Portfolio Management Principles
### Diversification
Spreading investments across sectors reduces risk from any single failure.
### Position Sizing
Limiting individual positions prevents catastrophic losses.
### Risk-Reward Assessment
Potential gains should justify potential losses.
### Time Horizon
Longer holding periods smooth out short-term volatility.
## Common Trading Mistakes
### Emotional Trading
Making decisions based on fear or greed rather than analysis.
### Overconfidence
Assuming you know more than the market.
### Confirmation Bias
Seeking only information that supports your existing view.
### Loss Aversion
Holding losers too long hoping they'll recover.
### Herd Mentality
Following the crowd without independent analysis.
## When to Seek More Information
Consider gathering more data when:
- News seems incomplete or contradictory
- Price movement doesn't match fundamentals
- Insider activity seems unusual
- Sector dynamics are shifting
- Major events are pending (earnings, trials, contracts)