πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ US Stock Screener ← Switch market β˜… Elite Club ⚑ StockGenie AI

Introduction to U.S. Stock Markets

How a share of Apple actually gets from a seller in California to a buyer in New York in 0.0003 seconds β€” and why understanding that pipeline makes you a better investor.

1. What is a stock?

A share of stock is a fractional ownership claim on a public company. Buy one share of Apple (AAPL) and you own about 1 / 15,300,000,000 of Apple β€” its factories, patents, brand, $160B cash pile and every future dollar of profit. Companies issue stock to raise permanent capital that never has to be paid back; investors buy stock for two reasons: price appreciation (the business grows) and dividends (a slice of profits paid in cash).

"In the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine." β€” Benjamin Graham

Common stock vs preferred stock

  • Common β€” what you normally buy. Voting rights, last in line if the company is liquidated, unlimited upside.
  • Preferred β€” fixed dividend, paid before common, usually no vote, behaves like a bond.

2. NYSE vs Nasdaq vs OTC

VenueFoundedModelFamous listings
NYSE1792Hybrid auction + Designated Market Maker on the floorBRK.B, JPM, WMT, XOM
Nasdaq1971Pure electronic, multiple market makersAAPL, MSFT, NVDA, GOOGL
NYSE American / Arcaβ€”Smaller caps & ETFsMost ETFs trade on Arca
OTC Marketsβ€”Off-exchange, dealer networkForeign ADRs, micro-caps

Both NYSE and Nasdaq close at 4:00pm ET. Trades route automatically to whichever venue offers the best price under Reg NMS.

3. The big U.S. indexes

10-year stylized total return of the four headline U.S. indexes.

  • S&P 500 (SPX) β€” 500 largest U.S. companies, market-cap weighted. The default benchmark professional money is measured against.
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) β€” 30 blue chips, price-weighted (a quirky 1896 design). UnitedHealth swings the Dow far more than Apple does.
  • Nasdaq-100 (NDX) β€” 100 largest non-financial Nasdaq stocks. Tech-heavy, growth-tilted.
  • Russell 2000 (RUT) β€” 2,000 small caps. The "real economy" gauge.

4. Who is on the other side of your trade?

When you click Buy in your broker app, your order joins a stream of about 11 billion shares per day across U.S. equities. The cast:

  • Retail investors β€” you. ~25% of U.S. volume since 2020.
  • Mutual funds & pensions β€” Vanguard, Fidelity, CalPERS. Slow, large, benchmark-driven.
  • Hedge funds β€” Citadel, Millennium, Renaissance. Long/short, levered, sophisticated.
  • Market makers β€” Citadel Securities, Virtu, Jane Street. Always quote both sides, earn the spread.
  • HFT firms β€” Jump, Tower, Hudson River. Microsecond arbitrage.
  • Corporate buybacks β€” companies are the largest single buyer cohort most years.

5. Brokers, SIPC and account types

A broker is your gateway. The biggest U.S. retail brokers:

BrokerStrengthCommission
FidelityResearch, IRAs, customer service$0 stocks/ETFs
Charles SchwabBanking + brokerage, thinkorswim$0
Interactive BrokersPro tools, global markets, lowest margin rates$0 (Lite) / $0.005/sh (Pro)
RobinhoodMobile UX, fractional shares$0
VanguardIndex funds, retirement$0

SIPC insurance

The Securities Investor Protection Corporation insures up to $500,000 per account ($250k cash) if your broker fails. SIPC does not cover market losses β€” only broker insolvency. Most large brokers carry additional Lloyd's of London "excess SIPC" coverage up to $50–150M.

Account types

  • Taxable brokerage β€” flexible, fully taxable.
  • Traditional IRA / 401(k) β€” pre-tax in, taxed on withdrawal.
  • Roth IRA / Roth 401(k) β€” after-tax in, withdrawals tax-free.
  • HSA β€” triple tax-advantaged when paired with a high-deductible health plan.
  • 529 β€” college savings, tax-free for qualified education.

6. Market hours and circuit breakers

SessionTime (ET)Notes
Pre-market4:00 β€” 9:30 amThin liquidity, wide spreads
Regular9:30 am β€” 4:00 pm~95% of daily volume
After-hours4:00 β€” 8:00 pmEarnings releases land here

The exchange closes for ~9 federal holidays plus early closes the day after Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve. Index-wide Limit Up–Limit Down circuit breakers halt all trading at 7%, 13% and 20% S&P drops in a single day.

7. Order types you actually need

  • Market β€” execute now at best price. Use only on large-cap, liquid names during regular hours.
  • Limit β€” buy at or below X / sell at or above X. Default for everything you care about.
  • Stop β€” becomes a market order if price crosses your stop. Risk-control tool.
  • Stop-limit β€” becomes a limit order. Won't sell below your floor (so it may not fill at all in a crash).
  • Trailing stop β€” stop that follows price up by a fixed % or $.
  • OCO (One-Cancels-Other) β€” bracket a position with a target and a stop simultaneously.
Rule of thumb: never use a market order on a stock that trades less than 1M shares/day or outside 9:30–3:55pm ET.

8. Bid, ask, spread, slippage

The bid is the highest price someone will pay; the ask is the lowest someone will accept. The gap is the spread β€” your built-in cost of trading.

BID
$184.22
x 1,200
spread = $0.03
ASK
$184.25
x 800

For AAPL the spread is ~$0.01 (0.005%). For an illiquid micro-cap it can be 5%. Slippage is the extra cost when your order is bigger than the size at the inside quote and walks up/down the book.

9. Settlement (T+1) and clearing

Since May 28, 2024, U.S. equities settle T+1 β€” one business day after the trade. The DTCC (Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation) nets all trades and moves the actual share entitlements between brokers. You don't see this; your broker shows you the trade as instantly final.

Practical implication: if you sell on Monday, the cash is "settled" Tuesday and can be withdrawn Wednesday. Day-trading with unsettled funds in a cash account triggers a good-faith violation.

10. Dividends, splits and corporate actions

  • Cash dividend β€” quarterly cash payment. Four key dates: declaration β†’ ex-dividend β†’ record β†’ payment. You must own the stock before the ex-date to receive the dividend.
  • Stock split β€” 4-for-1 split = 4x as many shares at 1/4 the price. Cosmetic, total value unchanged.
  • Reverse split β€” common in struggling stocks to stay above the $1 listing floor. Often a yellow flag.
  • Spin-off β€” parent distributes shares of a subsidiary to existing holders.
  • Buyback β€” company purchases its own shares, shrinking the share count.

11. Reading a stock quote and 10-K

Every stock page on this site shows the same building blocks you'll see on any professional terminal: last price, day change, day range, 52-week range, market cap, P/E, EPS, beta, dividend yield, average volume. The 10-K (annual report) and 10-Q (quarterly) filed at sec.gov/edgar are the primary source documents. Read at minimum: Item 1 (Business), Item 1A (Risk Factors), Item 7 (MD&A).

12. Your first 30-day learning plan

  1. Days 1–5: Open a brokerage account. Fund $500. Set up 2FA with a hardware key (see Cybersecurity module).
  2. Days 6–10: Buy one share of a broad ETF (VTI or VOO). Watch how the order fills.
  3. Days 11–15: Read one 10-K (try MSFT β€” well written). Identify revenue mix, gross margin, free cash flow.
  4. Days 16–20: Complete the Technical Analysis module.
  5. Days 21–25: Complete the Fundamental Analysis module and value one stock yourself.
  6. Days 26–30: Write your Investment Policy Statement: goals, allocation, what you'll do in a 30% drawdown. Pin it to your screen.

Money is not made by knowing more β€” it's made by acting on a written plan you'll actually follow.