Why do stock prices fluctuate?

Stock prices are like the price of candy at a store, they go up and down depending on what people want to buy.

Imagine you and your friends all love chocolate bars. One day, everyone wants to buy them, so the store raises the price because there’s more demand. The next day, only a few kids show up, so the store lowers the price to sell more candy. That's how stock prices work, they go up when lots of people want to buy, and down when not many people are interested.

Why People Want to Buy or Sell

Sometimes, people think a company will do really well in the future. They buy its stock, hoping it'll be worth more later. That makes the price go up. Other times, if something bad happens, like a company loses money or has trouble, people might sell their stock fast, making the price drop.

It's Like a Game of Guessing

Think of buying and selling stocks as playing a guessing game. If you guess right about how well a company will do, you win, your stock goes up! If you guess wrong, you lose, your stock goes down. Everyone is trying to guess better than the others, which makes prices change all the time. Stock prices are like the price of candy at a store, they go up and down depending on what people want to buy.

Imagine you and your friends all love chocolate bars. One day, everyone wants to buy them, so the store raises the price because there’s more demand. The next day, only a few kids show up, so the store lowers the price to sell more candy. That's how stock prices work, they go up when lots of people want to buy, and down when not many people are interested.

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Examples

  1. A company's stock price drops after it announces lower profits.
  2. People start buying more stocks because they think prices will go up.
  3. A big investor sells a lot of shares, causing the price to fall.

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