Volume (finance)

In capital markets, volume, or trading volume, is the amount (total number) of a security (or a given set of securities, or an entire market) that was traded during a given period of time. In the context of a single stock trading on a stock exchange, the volume is commonly reported as the number of shares that changed hands during a given day. The transactions are measured on stocks, bonds, options contracts, futures contracts and commodities.[1]

The average volume of a security over a longer period of time is the total amount traded in that period, divided by the length of the period. Therefore, the unit of measurement for average volume is shares per unit of time, typically per trading day.

Significance

Trading volume is usually higher when the price of a security is changing. News about a company's financial status, products, or plans, whether positive or negative, will usually result in a temporary increase in the trade volume of its stock.

Shifts in trade volume can make observed price movements more significant.[2] Higher volume for a stock is an indicator of higher liquidity in the market.[3] For institutional investors who wish to sell a large number of shares of a certain stock, lower liquidity will force them to sell the stock slowly over a longer period of time, to avoid losses due to slippage.

In the United States, the Rule 144 of the Securities Act of 1933 restricts the buying or selling of an amount of a security that exceeds a certain fraction of its average trading volume. Therefore, the calculation of the trading volume is regulated by the SEC.[4]

gollark: <@185901063755268097> Why is learning the overly specific and not very transferable commands of your specific CC "OS" more useful than learning the usual CC Ones?
gollark: Still, you can do those things, it would just be annoying and hard.
gollark: Turing-completeness requires infinite memory.
gollark: Technically Lua is TC as a language, but no actual implementation is.
gollark: I guess?

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.