:
Opening price: refers to the price of the first daily transaction. Closing price: refers to the price of the last stock traded every day, that is, the highest closing price: refers to the different prices of the stocks traded that day as the highest transaction price. Lowest price: refers to the lowest transaction price among different prices of the day. Average transaction price: refers to the average cost price bought in batches or in different time periods.
What data should I look at in stock selection?
In the A-share market, some investors choose stocks according to technical indicators, and some investors also choose stocks according to some data, that is, according to the following data:
1, P/E ratio
P/E ratio is the ratio of price per share to earnings per share. If the price-earnings ratio of a company's stock is too high, then the price of this stock is frothy and overvalued, so investors try to choose stocks with lower price-earnings ratio.
2. Circulation plate
Circulation refers to the stocks circulating in the market. When the circulation is large, more funds are needed to pull up individual stocks. When the circulation is small, it is easy to be controlled and the stock price fluctuates greatly. Therefore, investors try to choose stocks with moderate circulation, generally speaking, the circulation is around 654.38 billion.
3. Turnover rate
Turnover rate refers to the frequency of stock trading in the market in a certain period of time, and it is one of the indicators reflecting the strength of stock liquidity. A high turnover rate means that stock trading is active, while a low turnover rate means that stock trading is inactive. When investors choose stocks, they should try to choose stocks with relatively high turnover rate, that is, stocks with turnover rate around 10%.
4. Financial statements
Mainly depends on the performance changes of financial statements. Performance is the internal driving force of stock price rise. When choosing individual stocks, investors should try their best to choose individual stocks with year-on-year growth in performance.
5. Proportion of institutional posts
The proportion of institutional positions can judge the actual situation of the main force of individual stocks. When the proportion of institutional positions of individual stocks is large and gradually increasing, it shows that the main force is optimistic about the stock, while the proportion of institutional positions is small and gradually decreasing, indicating that the main force is not optimistic about the stock. In the process of lightening positions, the stock price may fall in the later period, and investors should try to choose stocks with a large proportion of institutional positions.