Understanding Stocks: How to Profit, Risks, and Buying Guide for Beginners
A stock represents partial ownership in a company, allowing shareholders to benefit from the company's success through capital gains and dividends. When a company issues shares, it divides ownership into small units sold to the public, making buyers minority partners who share in profits and risks. Stock prices fluctuate based on supply and demand and investor expectations about the company's future, which can lead to gains or losses.
Investors can earn money from stocks mainly in two ways: capital gains, which occur when a stock's price rises above the purchase price, and dividends, which are portions of company profits distributed to shareholders periodically. Not all companies pay dividends, especially growth companies that reinvest earnings. Both capital gains and dividends are subject to a 25% tax in Israel, usually deducted automatically by banks or investment houses.
Stock prices are influenced by company performance, industry developments, economic conditions, interest rates, and geopolitical events. Prices reflect market expectations, so even positive earnings reports can cause price drops if results fall short of forecasts. Investing in individual stocks carries risks, including partial or total loss if the company fails. Diversification through index funds, which hold baskets of many stocks, reduces risk by spreading exposure across multiple companies.
To buy stocks, investors must open a trading account at a bank or investment firm, deposit funds, select the desired stock by name or ticker, and place a market or limit order. There is no legal minimum investment amount, but fees and minimum deposits vary by provider. Index funds (ETFs) offer a simpler, lower-risk entry point for beginners by providing broad market exposure with relatively low fees.
Choosing between individual stocks and index funds depends on the investor's knowledge, risk tolerance, and willingness to monitor investments. Beginners often start with index funds for diversification and stability, while individual stocks require more expertise and acceptance of higher volatility.
The same event, reported separately by each outlet. Open a few to compare what different newsrooms emphasize — and what they leave out.
Not the same event — other stories that share this one’s people, places, or theme: background, reactions, and follow-ups.