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Home›Investing & Wealth›Building Wealth›Investing Basics

What Is a Stock?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
3 sources2 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • A stock is a share of ownership in a company; owning 100 shares out of 1 million means you own 0.01% of the company
  • Stock prices fluctuate based on earnings, growth prospects, competition, and investor sentiment—not fundamental value alone
  • Dividend-paying stocks return cash to shareholders; growth stocks reinvest profits and don't pay dividends
  • Stock market returns have historically averaged 10% annually over decades, making stocks the best long-term inflation hedge
  • Individual stock picking is difficult; most investors beat the market by owning diversified index funds of many stocks
On this page
  • Ownership and Voting Rights
  • Stock Returns: Capital Appreciation + Dividends
  • Types of Stocks
  • Stock Market Returns
  • Stock Valuation
  • Why Stock Prices Fluctuate
  • Individual Stocks vs. Diversification
  • Stock Splits and Dividends
  • Tax Implications
  • The Bottom Line

A stock is a share of ownership in a company. When you buy a stock, you're buying fractional ownership of a business.

Ownership and Voting Rights

When a company issues 1 million shares, each share represents 1/1,000,000th ownership.

If you own 1,000 shares:

  • You own 0.1% of the company
  • You're entitled to 0.1% of profits (via dividends)
  • You get 0.1% of voting rights (in shareholder elections)

This differs from bonds (you're a lender, not an owner) and debentures (complex hybrid securities).

Stock Returns: Capital Appreciation + Dividends

Stocks return money through two mechanisms:

1. Capital appreciation: The stock price rises. You buy Apple at $150, sell at $180. $30 gain per share.

2. Dividends: The company distributes profits to shareholders. If Apple pays a $0.60 annual dividend, you receive $0.60 per share owned quarterly.

Total return: Capital appreciation + dividend yield

Example: You own 100 Apple shares at $150 = $15,000 invested

  • Year 1: Stock rises to $165 (+$1,500)
  • Dividends: $60 ($0.60 × 100)
  • Total return: $1,560 / $15,000 = 10.4%

Types of Stocks

By company size:

  • Mega-cap: $200B+ (Apple, Microsoft, Tesla)
  • Large-cap: $10B-$200B (typical Fortune 500)
  • Mid-cap: $2B-$10B
  • Small-cap: $300M-$2B
  • Micro-cap: <$300M

By growth profile:

  • Growth stocks: Reinvest profits; stock price appreciation is the return. Examples: Tesla, Amazon (historically). Volatility is high.
  • Value stocks: Mature companies with low growth but high dividends. Examples: Utilities, banks. Income is the return.
  • Dividend aristocrats: Companies that have raised dividends for 25+ consecutive years. Examples: Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola.

By geography:

  • Domestic: U.S. companies
  • International: Developed markets (Europe, Japan)
  • Emerging: Developing economies (India, Brazil, Vietnam)

Stock Market Returns

The S&P 500 (largest 500 U.S. companies) has returned approximately 10% annually over the past century.

This 10% consists of:

  • 7-8% capital appreciation: Companies grow earnings; stock prices rise
  • 2-3% dividend yield: Companies distribute profits

Long-term wealth building: $10,000 at 10% annual return compounds to $67,275 after 20 years, $1.07 million after 50 years.

This is why stocks are the best long-term inflation hedge. Bonds returning 4-5% lose to inflation long-term. Savings accounts returning 0.5% lose dramatically. Stocks at 10% beat inflation by 7-8%, creating real wealth.

Stock Valuation

Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio: Stock price ÷ Annual earnings per share

Example: Apple stock $150, earnings per share $6 = P/E of 25

Interpretation: You're paying $25 for every $1 of annual earnings. Is this expensive or cheap?

  • Historical average S&P 500 P/E: 16-18
  • P/E of 25 is above average, suggesting expectations of future growth

Market Cap: Stock price × Total shares outstanding

Example: Apple at $150 with 16 billion shares outstanding = $2.4 trillion market cap

Interpretation: The market thinks Apple is worth $2.4 trillion.

Why Stock Prices Fluctuate

Stock prices respond to:

  1. Earnings news: Good earnings boost the stock; poor earnings sink it
  2. Growth expectations: If a company is expected to grow 20% annually but only grows 10%, the stock crashes despite growing
  3. Competitor threats: News of new competition can crash stocks despite strong current earnings
  4. Macro environment: Recession fears, interest rate changes, inflation expectations affect all stocks
  5. Sentiment: Emotional buying and selling create bubbles and crashes unrelated to fundamentals

Individual Stocks vs. Diversification

Individual stock picking: Requires research, skill, and luck. Even if you identify good companies, individual stock risk is high.

Example: Microsoft was a great investment (up 50,000%+ since IPO). But if you'd bought only Microsoft, you'd have concentrated risk. It could have been a bad investment too (competition from Apple, Google in some areas).

Diversification: Owning 500 stocks (S&P 500 index) guarantees you'll capture market returns. You can't beat the market, but you can't get crushed by one bad pick either.

Research shows 85-90% of active stock pickers underperform a simple S&P 500 index fund over 15+ years.

Stock Splits and Dividends

Stock split: Company divides shares to lower per-share price. Example: 2-for-1 split: 100 shares at $300 becomes 200 shares at $150. Value unchanged.

Dividend: Company distributes cash to shareholders. Example: $1 annual dividend on 100 shares = $100 cash annually.

Tax Implications

Capital gains tax:

  • Short-term (held <1 year): Taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%)
  • Long-term (held >1 year): Taxed at lower rates (0-20%)

Dividend tax:

  • Qualified dividends: 0-20% tax
  • Non-qualified: Ordinary income rates (up to 37%)

This is why holding period matters. A stock you buy and sell immediately is taxed at high rates. A stock you buy and hold for years is taxed more favorably.

The Bottom Line

Stocks are ownership stakes in companies. They return cash through appreciation and dividends. Long-term, stocks return 10% annually and are the best inflation hedge. Most investors should own stocks through diversified index funds rather than trying to pick individual winners.

◆ Sources

  1. Stock Explained — Investopedia
  2. S&P 500 Historical Prices
  3. SPIVA Performance Data — S&P Dow Jones Indices
On this page
  • Ownership and Voting Rights
  • Stock Returns: Capital Appreciation + Dividends
  • Types of Stocks
  • Stock Market Returns
  • Stock Valuation
  • Why Stock Prices Fluctuate
  • Individual Stocks vs. Diversification
  • Stock Splits and Dividends
  • Tax Implications
  • The Bottom Line
◆ Related reading
  • Should I pay off debt or invest?
  • What Is an Expense Ratio?
  • What Is an ETF?
  • The Principal-Agent Problem: When the Person You Hired Has Different Goals
All Investing Basics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

View full profile →

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