Lesson 6 of 13 · 46%

What “the stock market” actually is

The phrase “stock market” gets thrown around as if it were one place. It isn’t. In India, “the market” is the combined activity across two main exchanges — the National Stock Exchange (NSE) and the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) — plus the broader ecosystem of regulators, intermediaries, and listed companies. The NSE is the volume leader; the BSE is older (1875, Asia’s oldest exchange) but smaller in equity trading.

The market itself splits into two distinct halves: the primary market, where new shares are issued (IPOs, FPOs, rights issues) and money flows to companies; and the secondary market, where existing shares change hands between investors and no money reaches the company.

PRIMARY vs SECONDARY MARKET PRIMARY MARKET Company sells NEW shares to investors IPO, FPO, Rights Issue Money goes to COMPANY SECONDARY MARKET Investors trade EXISTING shares among themselves NSE, BSE daily trading Money flows investor to investor IPO subscription happens in the primary; daily price movement happens in the secondary.
Primary market = new shares, money to companies. Secondary market = existing shares, money to other investors.

What moves stock prices

Daily price moves come from one mechanism: the balance of buyers and sellers. Each willing buyer puts in a bid; each willing seller puts in an ask; the exchange matches them. If buyers outnumber sellers at a given price, the price ticks up. The reverse pushes it down.

Underneath that mechanism, four broad categories drive sentiment:

  • Company-specific news. Quarterly results, management changes, new product launches, regulatory approvals or rejections, contract wins/losses.
  • Sector trends. Oil prices for energy, monsoon for FMCG and agri, interest rates for banks and real estate, government policy for defence and railways.
  • Macro factors. RBI policy, inflation, GDP growth, fiscal deficit, currency moves, FII flows.
  • Global cues. US Fed decisions, China growth, oil shocks, geopolitical events. Indian markets are increasingly correlated with global risk-on/risk-off mood.

How a stock actually gets traded

Indian equity trading happens between 9:15 am and 3:30 pm IST on working days. There’s a pre-open session from 9:00 to 9:15 where opening prices are discovered through an auction. There’s a post-close session from 3:40 to 4:00 for closing-price-based orders.

Your order goes through this path: your broker’s terminal → broker’s order management system → exchange’s matching engine → counterparty’s broker → counterparty. Latency is in milliseconds for retail; in microseconds for high-frequency institutional traders co-located in NSE’s Mumbai data centre.

The exchange matches orders based on price-time priority: best price wins, and at the same price the earlier order wins. The matched trade gets a unique trade number, both sides receive contract notes, and the obligation enters the clearing pipeline.

What happens after you own a stock

From the moment shares hit your demat, you’re legally a part-owner of the company. That entitles you to:

  • A proportional share of profits when distributed as dividend.
  • Voting rights at AGMs and EGMs (one vote per share for equity).
  • Information rights — quarterly results, annual report, board changes, related-party transactions.
  • Capital appreciation if the company does well and the market re-rates.
  • A claim on residual assets in winding up — though equity ranks last, after lenders and preference shareholders.

You’re also exposed to the company’s risks: bad management, sector downturns, regulatory shocks, fraud. There’s no upper limit to the upside of an equity holding, but there’s a clear floor: zero. The stock can’t go negative.

How returns are calculated

Three measures matter:

  • Absolute return = (Selling price − Buying price) ÷ Buying price. Simple but ignores time.
  • CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) = ((Final ÷ Initial)^(1/years) − 1). Standardises across different holding periods.
  • XIRR = compound rate for irregular cash flows. Use when you’ve added or withdrawn money during the holding period (SIP into a stock, partial selling).

Add dividends back into your return calculation — they’re real cash that landed in your account. “Total return” includes both price appreciation and dividends.

Where you fit in

Three broad investor personas exist:

  • Investor — buys for years, focuses on business fundamentals, mostly ignores daily price noise. Most retail participants should be here.
  • Trader — holds for days to weeks, uses charts and momentum, watches daily moves. Requires more time and a higher pain tolerance.
  • Speculator — holds for hours, trades on news flow and short-term swings. High variance; most lose money over time.

There’s no objectively right answer. There’s only what fits your time, temperament, and goals. The single biggest mistake is choosing a persona that doesn’t match your life — most failed retail traders are investors who got bored.

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Primary vs Secondary Markets — Two Sides of the Same Coin

Indian equity capital flows through two distinct markets that often get conflated. The primary market is where new securities are issued (IPOs, FPOs, rights issues, QIPs); the secondary market is where existing securities change hands between investors.

AspectPrimary MarketSecondary Market
Money flows toThe issuing companySelling investor (not company)
Price determined byBook-building or fixed priceContinuous order matching
FrequencyOne-off eventsEvery trading day 9:15 AM-3:30 PM
Settlement~T+5 from issue openT+1 since Jan 2023
SEBI rulesICDR Regulations 2018LODR Regulations 2015

NSE vs BSE — Why Two Exchanges?

NSE (founded 1992) dominates daily volume with 90%+ share of cash equities and ~99% of derivatives. BSE (founded 1875, Asia’s oldest exchange) retains primary listing relevance for some legacy names and competitive pricing on certain segments. The two exchanges are interoperable — most stocks list on both, brokers route orders to the venue with best execution. SEBI’s 2023 norms further reduced fragmentation risks by mandating identical settlement cycles. As an investor you do not pick the exchange; your broker’s smart-order-router does that automatically.

FAQs — Trading Mechanics

What is pre-open and how do I use it?
9:00-9:15 AM is the pre-open auction where buyers and sellers place orders without immediate matching. At 9:15 AM the market-clearing equilibrium price opens trading. Use limit orders only; market orders in pre-open get matched at the equilibrium price which can be far from your expectation.

What is the circuit filter?
SEBI restricts intraday moves to ±2%, 5%, 10% or 20% depending on the stock’s volatility band. When circuit triggers, trading halts. Useful for retail protection from manipulation but frustrating in genuine news flow.

Is BSE worth using if NSE has 90% volume?
For most blue-chip equities NSE is sufficient. BSE matters for: certain mid-cap and small-cap listings, IPO listings (BSE often gets the primary listing first), and arbitrage between the two exchanges. Discount brokers route automatically.

The Tick Size, Lot Size and Spread Economics

Indian exchanges set tick size (minimum price increment) at ₹0.05 for stocks priced above ₹250 and ₹0.01 for below — a small detail but it controls bid-ask spread economics. A ₹0.05 tick on a ₹100 stock is a 0.05% spread; on a ₹1,000 stock it is 0.005%. Lot size in F&O is calibrated by SEBI to keep contract value around ₹5-10 lakh — currently NIFTY lot 50, Bank Nifty lot 15, single-stock options like Reliance lot 250, HDFC Bank lot 550. Larger lot sizes effectively price out small retail from individual stocks — a deliberate policy after the 2022 SEBI study found 89% of retail option traders lost money. For market-makers, profitable scalping depends on capturing spreads of one or two ticks per trade across thousands of trades — explaining why algorithmic and HFT volume now accounts for 50%+ of Indian cash-segment turnover.

Recommended Reading

Go deeper with these market classics

Hand-picked books to reinforce what you’ve learned in this lesson.

Reminiscences of a Stock Operatorby Edwin LefevreView on Amazon →
The Little Book of Common Sense Investingby John BogleView on Amazon →
Market Wizardsby Jack SchwagerView on Amazon →
The Unusual Billionairesby Saurabh MukherjeaView on Amazon →
Fundamentals of Corporate Financeby Stephen RossView on Amazon →
Bulls, Bears and Other Beastsby Santosh NairView on Amazon →
Browse Our Full Bookshop →200+ hand-picked finance, investing & business books — Amazon affiliate.
Practical next steps

Apply what you’ve learned

Recommended platforms for Indian readers who want to track real transactions or start investing. International readers — please check whether these are available in your country.
Zerodha
India’s largest broker. Open a free demat account to practise reading the financial statements of listed companies.
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Groww
Beginner-friendly investing app. Great for applying ratio analysis on mutual funds and stocks.
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QuickBooks / Xero / FreshBooks
Industry-standard accounting software for small businesses and freelancers.
Coming soon
Zoho ONE
All-in-one business suite — accounting, CRM, invoicing, payroll, projects and 40+ apps in one subscription.
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