Price Change

Price Change

A price change in the stock market is a shift in the value of a security or another asset to either a higher or lower level. Although it can be computed for any length of time, the most commonly cited price change in the financial media is the daily price change, which is the change in the price of a security from the previous trading day's close to the current day's close. There are numerous metrics in investment analysis that involve price change — such as the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) in fundamental analysis and the rate-of-change indicator (ROC) in technical analysis. The percentage price change is generally the norm for computing asset performance. Price change refers to the difference between a security's closing price on a trading day and its closing price on the previous trading day. Net change is the difference between a prior trading period’s closing price and the current trading period’s closing price.

Price change refers to the difference between a security's closing price on a trading day and its closing price on the previous trading day.

What Is a Price Change?

A price change in the stock market is a shift in the value of a security or another asset to either a higher or lower level. The term also refers to the difference between a stock's closing price on a trading day and its closing price on the previous trading day.

Investors and analysts watch price changes in a company's stock closely, as often this is the most visible barometer of the company's financial health.

Price change refers to the difference between a security's closing price on a trading day and its closing price on the previous trading day.
A security's price likely is the most visible barometer of an issuer's financial health.
Predicting price changes is one of the most critical parts of an analyst's job.

How Price Changes Work

Although it can be computed for any length of time, the most commonly cited price change in the financial media is the daily price change, which is the change in the price of a security from the previous trading day's close to the current day's close.

Equity analysts also commonly consider year-to-date, and latest-12-month price changes when analyzing a company.

Predicting Price Changes

The price change is a core component of financial analysis. Predicting price changes can be as, if not more, important than the change itself. Price change forms one of the two factors that comprise the total return from an investment over a period of time. The second factor is any dividends or distributions obtained from the investment.

When discussing price changes in the market, it's important to consider "price change" in context, whether it be time frame — daily, year-to-date, and latest-12-month price changes, or type — percentage, absolute, or net. There are numerous metrics in investment analysis that involve price change — such as the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E ratio) in fundamental analysis and the rate-of-change indicator (ROC) in technical analysis.

Percentage Price Change

The percentage price change is generally the norm for computing asset performance. It is important to remember that percentage-based price changes are useful only in the context of the number of dollars at play. A 75% change in the price of a box of cereal, for example, may only involve a few dollars while a 75% change in the price of Berkshire Hathaway may involve thousands of dollars.

Absolute Price Change

For shorter intraday periods, an absolute price change may be used by momentum and algorithmic traders as the basis for trading and arbitrage strategies.

Net Change

Net change is the difference between a prior trading period’s closing price and the current trading period’s closing price. For stock prices, the net change is most often referring to a daily time frame, so the net change can be positive or negative for the day in question.

Why Price Changes Are Important

A security's price likely is the most visible barometer of an issuer's financial health. Companies, their management, shareholders, and investment banks are some of the constituents that care about changes in securities' prices. So, whenever a stock's price increases or decreases, you can be sure that management teams and others, will be watching it closely. Naturally, they want their stock to perform well because they're in the business of making money. Here are some more reasons to care:

Understanding the Effects of Price Changes

If publicly-traded security experiences numerous price changes in a relatively short time, this could be labeled as a period of volatility. When a security’s price changes positively, its value increases, and it might attract the attention of more investors who would buy shares in the hopes of seeing higher returns. Price changes naturally can include declines, in which case investors tend to sell off stock, which could negate any gains.

Company-Level Factors

Activities directly associated with companies can drive price changes in publicly traded securities. A change in executive leadership, the announcement of new strategies or products, and the positive reception of a company's’ products in the marketplace all could drive price increases.

If a company invests considerable time and resources to create a new product line, how the product is received by customers could affect the company’s earnings. If an analyst reports that the product’s sales were above target, the company’s shares may see a positive price change as investors purchase more stock in response. Conversely, if a company sees some of its products perform poorly with its customers, then the shares may fall in value.

External Factors That Can Drive Price Changes

External factors such as industry shifts, government regulations, or even severe weather that affects company operations can also influence price changes; investors and analysts weigh how those elements may influence a company's’ performance in the future. Examining a historic range of price changes also can be a way to put into perspective the impact that particular events have had on a company’s valuation.

Related terms:

Algorithmic Trading

Algorithmic trading is a system that utilizes very advanced mathematical models for making transaction decisions in the financial markets.  read more

Berkshire Hathaway

Berkshire Hathaway is a holding company for a multitude of businesses, run by chair and CEO Warren Buffett. read more

Closing Price

Even in the era of 24-hour trading, there is a closing price for a stock or other asset, and it is the last price it trades at during market hours. read more

Earnings

A company's earnings are its after-tax net income, meaning its profits. Earnings are the main determinant of a public company's share price. read more

Gap Risk

Gap risk is the risk that a stock's price will fall dramatically between the closing price and the next day's opening price. read more

Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more

Net Change

Net change is the difference between the closing price of a security on the current trading day and the previous day's closing price. read more

Plus Tick

A plus tick is a price designation referring to the trading of a security at a price higher than the previous sale price for the same security.  read more

Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio

The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is the ratio for valuing a company that measures its current share price relative to its per-share earnings. read more

Price Rate Of Change Indicator - ROC and Uses

Price rate of change (ROC) is a technical indicator that measures the percent change between the most recent price and a price in the past used to identify price trends. read more