Understand the
Market. Own Your Future.
A beginner's visual guide to the core concepts, terms, and strategies that drive the Indian stock market.
Core Trading Terms
Stock / Share
A stock or share represents a small ownership stake in a company. Buying shares makes you a part-owner — eligible to benefit from the company's growth and profits.
Bid Price
The bid price is the highest amount buyers are willing to pay for a stock at any given moment. Multiple buyers may bid different amounts, but the market shows the highest bid.
Ask Price
The ask price is the minimum price at which sellers are willing to sell their shares. The gap between the bid and ask is called the spread — a measure of market efficiency.
Market Order
A market order executes your buy or sell immediately at the best available price. It guarantees execution, but not a specific price — ideal for quick trades in liquid stocks.
Limit Order
A limit order lets you set the exact price at which you want to buy or sell. Your order only executes if the market reaches your specified price — giving you control over cost, but no guarantee of execution.
Market Conditions
🐂 Bull Market
A bull market is when stock prices rise consistently and investor confidence is high. Optimism drives buying, pushing prices even higher — a positive cycle for investors.
🐻 Bear Market
A bear market is when stock prices decline for an extended period. Fear dominates — investors sell to avoid further losses, deepening the downturn across indices.
Volatility
Volatility measures how sharply and quickly stock prices move. High volatility means large swings — both opportunity and risk. Low volatility signals stable, predictable prices.
Liquidity
Liquidity reflects how easily you can buy or sell a stock without significantly impacting its price. High-liquidity stocks have many active buyers and sellers, making trades smoother and faster.
Valuation Metrics
P/E Ratio
The Price-to-Earnings ratio shows how much investors are willing to pay for ₹1 of a company's earnings. It's a fundamental tool for comparing stocks and spotting overvalued or undervalued opportunities.
Market Capitalization
Market cap is the total market value of a company — calculated by multiplying the share price by the total number of shares. It classifies companies into small-cap, mid-cap, and large-cap.
Corporate Actions
A dividend is a portion of the company's profit paid out to shareholders as a reward for holding shares. Not all companies offer dividends — growth-stage companies often reinvest profits instead.
A stock split divides existing shares into multiple smaller ones to make them more affordable and accessible to retail investors. The total value of your investment stays the same.
A bonus issue gives existing shareholders additional free shares from the company's reserves — as a reward for loyalty. The share price adjusts proportionally, keeping total value unchanged.
A rights issue offers existing shareholders the opportunity to buy additional shares at a discounted price before they are offered to the public — a way for companies to raise fresh capital.
Key Concepts
IPO
An Initial Public Offering is when a private company sells its shares to the public for the very first time to raise capital. After the IPO, the stock is listed on an exchange for regular trading.
Index
An index is a curated basket of stocks that represents the overall market or a specific sector. It helps investors track the pulse of the market at a glance, without analyzing every stock.
Portfolio
Your portfolio is the complete collection of your investments — stocks, mutual funds, bonds, and more. A well-diversified portfolio balances risk across different sectors and asset types.
