the price of a stock is entirely based on the profits investors expect the company to make. the most common tool our finance overlords use is calculating the present value of all the estimated future cash flows. that's how they determine/estimate market cap.
the price might fluctuate arbitrarily throughout the day by a few percentage points, but that doesnt mean the range is arbitrarily arrived at. that's why the biggest changes to price happens either when some news breaks or financial reports are released
the price of shares is literally market cap / number of shares
so yes, share price literally represents the present value of all the estimated future profits/surplus value.
The expected proffit has no relationship with the actual proffit. Companies don't have any obligation to pay shareholders the arbitrary amount they bought the stock for, so just because a stock is selling high or low, doesn't mean that value will be extracted.
For example, Tesla only recently turned a proffit, mostly on bitcoin speculation. Despite massive stock value rises over the past few years, they were making a loss.
dividends aren't 'the actual profit.' actual profit is dividends + change in price.
what matters most is whether or not the company meets its publicly stated target sales/profits. if they dont, the price falls, if they do, prices increase along with the market. if they exceed their stated goals prices beat the market.
the whole speculation thing is based on company performance. that's how it works for normal companies at least.
tesla is one of those weird companies that's based on hype and news. investors are willing to burn cash so long as the business grows.
Change in price is proffit for the guy buying the stock, but isn't actually exploited from the worker. It's just coming from the guy who buys the asset. If I buy a house, then sell it 10 years later at a higher price, that's supply and demand, not additional labour going in. Same with stocks. The trades don't come from labour.
but the stock literally represents the exchange value of the company...the labor, the fixed assets and how effectively those two things are being put to use.
if the value of the company goes up, that literally means the profit rate has gone up(again cash burning companies like tesla work a bit differently).
like...to a marxist, the definition of profit is literally the difference between the value the worker creates and the amount they get paid. hence yea any given share represents labor being exploited.
Because we’ve seen the stock market, by and large, act in ways which are completely untethered from material reality.
Aggregates like the Dow Jones are a full 50% higher than they were when trump took office in 2016. It’s been five years! I see absolutely no metrics tied to exploitation of labor or whatever else that would explain a 50% rise in asset prices. Rather, profitability has long been falling for companies as a whole.
So the argument that “stocks are inherently speculative assets whose prices are simply determined by the amount of money that has nowhere else to go” (i.e., money which cannot find a more lucrative, actually exploitative investment like more factories or whatever) is far more convincing to me personally.
no
the price of a stock is entirely based on the profits investors expect the company to make. the most common tool our finance overlords use is calculating the present value of all the estimated future cash flows. that's how they determine/estimate market cap.
the price might fluctuate arbitrarily throughout the day by a few percentage points, but that doesnt mean the range is arbitrarily arrived at. that's why the biggest changes to price happens either when some news breaks or financial reports are released
the price of shares is literally market cap / number of shares
so yes, share price literally represents the present value of all the estimated future profits/surplus value.
The expected proffit has no relationship with the actual proffit. Companies don't have any obligation to pay shareholders the arbitrary amount they bought the stock for, so just because a stock is selling high or low, doesn't mean that value will be extracted.
For example, Tesla only recently turned a proffit, mostly on bitcoin speculation. Despite massive stock value rises over the past few years, they were making a loss.
dividends aren't 'the actual profit.' actual profit is dividends + change in price.
what matters most is whether or not the company meets its publicly stated target sales/profits. if they dont, the price falls, if they do, prices increase along with the market. if they exceed their stated goals prices beat the market.
the whole speculation thing is based on company performance. that's how it works for normal companies at least.
tesla is one of those weird companies that's based on hype and news. investors are willing to burn cash so long as the business grows.
Change in price is proffit for the guy buying the stock, but isn't actually exploited from the worker. It's just coming from the guy who buys the asset. If I buy a house, then sell it 10 years later at a higher price, that's supply and demand, not additional labour going in. Same with stocks. The trades don't come from labour.
but the stock literally represents the exchange value of the company...the labor, the fixed assets and how effectively those two things are being put to use.
if the value of the company goes up, that literally means the profit rate has gone up(again cash burning companies like tesla work a bit differently).
like...to a marxist, the definition of profit is literally the difference between the value the worker creates and the amount they get paid. hence yea any given share represents labor being exploited.
idk how what I'm saying could possibly be wrong.
Because we’ve seen the stock market, by and large, act in ways which are completely untethered from material reality.
Aggregates like the Dow Jones are a full 50% higher than they were when trump took office in 2016. It’s been five years! I see absolutely no metrics tied to exploitation of labor or whatever else that would explain a 50% rise in asset prices. Rather, profitability has long been falling for companies as a whole.
So the argument that “stocks are inherently speculative assets whose prices are simply determined by the amount of money that has nowhere else to go” (i.e., money which cannot find a more lucrative, actually exploitative investment like more factories or whatever) is far more convincing to me personally.