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Your Questions About Nasdaq Index




Susan asks…




Which options in Nasdaq truly indicates the Nasdaq index
movement?
Similarly option for DJIA index?




Steve Winston answers:

Options on the QQQQ




                                                           1/9
John asks…




Can you trade with the nasdaq,dow index on the stock market or
only with companies listed on a nasdaq exchange?
If yes how are these points in the indexes calculated into profits.




Steve Winston answers:

You can buy Exchange Traded Funds which track the Dow (DIA) or NASDAQ (QQQQ) or the
S&P 500 (SPY) as will as many other industry specific inicies. The ETFs trade like company
shares.




Robert asks…




                                                                                       2/9
What was the NASDAQ Index on Febreuary 13th?
The index net change in percentage and price for 2/13/09.




Steve Winston answers:

Date: 13-Feb-09

Open: 1,539.72
High: 1,552.57
Low: 1,530.05
Close: 1,534.36




Sandra asks…




What was the return of the Nasdaq Index in 2007?
I wanted to find a website or URL link that would show the return of the nasdaq, dow, S&P for
each year for the last five years...does such a site exist? Something like Dow 2007 12.7%, Dow




                                                                                         3/9
2006 5.25%. If you have a link, please let me know.
oops I mean 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003. Sorry about that. I needed coffee. lol




Steve Winston answers:

Instead of giving you just those numbers, I'm going to show you how to get all the historical
quotes you want!

It's simple!

Go to Yahoo finance (http://finance.yahoo.com)

Type in your symbol of the stock you’re looking for

Then on the left, click on historical quotes.

Now, you can then type in the date range you want and choose daily/weekly/etc and download
the data to excel or wherever.

Or if you prefer, you can go to this link instead. Just replace GOOG with the stock symbol that
you’re looking for.

Http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=GOOG

In your case, here’s the link to the Nasdaq composite index.

Http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EIXIC

And the link for the S&P 500

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EGSPC

And the link for the DOW

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EDJI




                                                                                            4/9
And the link for NYSE index

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5ENYA

Just take the closing prices each year and divide the new by the old to get your % change year
over year.

Hope that helps!

*By the way, the adjusted price is the stock price adjusted for splits. So if a stock was at 100,
and split 2 for 1 to 50, the adjusted price would show you the price as if the stock had always
been at 50 so you can determine the real change in value of that stock over time.




Chris asks…




Where can I find an authoratative history of the NASDAQ
composite index back to 1999?
Ideally I'd like data and a visually informative chart.




                                                                                              5/9
Steve Winston answers:

Chart:

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=%5EIXIC&t=my

Data:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EIXIC&a=00&b=1&c=1999&d=02&e=9&f=2006&g=d




Carol asks…




what does it mean when a company is removed from the nasdaq
index?




Steve Winston answers:

Stephanie:




                                                                              6/9
It means that the stock no longer meets the listing
requirements to be a part of the index. Earnings
may have fallen below acceptable levels.

The cash flow and stock capitalization may also
no longer meet the required standards, other
considerations, like revenue and operating income.

It means the stock has fallen out of favor for the
above reasons, and it no longer is representative
of what Nasdaq wants to present to its investing
public.




Sandy asks…




Do you think the NASDAQ composite index is going to break
through the lows that it made in 2002?
at the bottom of the last bear market?
I think it hit 1060 intraday?




                                                            7/9
Steve Winston answers:

You betcha
I think it will probably get down to 760 eventually
once Obama gets in there




Donna asks…




What is the equation used to calculate NASDAQ index?




Steve Winston answers:

First, there are many NASDAQ indexes. Second, each varies in its method. Generally, once the



                                                                                       8/9
stocks that are to be members of the index are chosen, the index is the the sum of (each stocks
                                   price x the number of shares in its float) divided by some arbitrary number to reduce the
                                   resultant huge number to a more resonable value.

                                   Often indexes are NOT dividend-adjusted meaning that most published US stock indexes
                                   understate long term performance by 2-5% per year.




                                   Powered by Yahoo! Answers


                                   Read More…




                                                                                                                            9/9
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Your Questions About Nasdaq Index

  • 1. Your Questions About Nasdaq Index Susan asks… Which options in Nasdaq truly indicates the Nasdaq index movement? Similarly option for DJIA index? Steve Winston answers: Options on the QQQQ 1/9
  • 2. John asks… Can you trade with the nasdaq,dow index on the stock market or only with companies listed on a nasdaq exchange? If yes how are these points in the indexes calculated into profits. Steve Winston answers: You can buy Exchange Traded Funds which track the Dow (DIA) or NASDAQ (QQQQ) or the S&P 500 (SPY) as will as many other industry specific inicies. The ETFs trade like company shares. Robert asks… 2/9
  • 3. What was the NASDAQ Index on Febreuary 13th? The index net change in percentage and price for 2/13/09. Steve Winston answers: Date: 13-Feb-09 Open: 1,539.72 High: 1,552.57 Low: 1,530.05 Close: 1,534.36 Sandra asks… What was the return of the Nasdaq Index in 2007? I wanted to find a website or URL link that would show the return of the nasdaq, dow, S&P for each year for the last five years...does such a site exist? Something like Dow 2007 12.7%, Dow 3/9
  • 4. 2006 5.25%. If you have a link, please let me know. oops I mean 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003. Sorry about that. I needed coffee. lol Steve Winston answers: Instead of giving you just those numbers, I'm going to show you how to get all the historical quotes you want! It's simple! Go to Yahoo finance (http://finance.yahoo.com) Type in your symbol of the stock you’re looking for Then on the left, click on historical quotes. Now, you can then type in the date range you want and choose daily/weekly/etc and download the data to excel or wherever. Or if you prefer, you can go to this link instead. Just replace GOOG with the stock symbol that you’re looking for. Http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=GOOG In your case, here’s the link to the Nasdaq composite index. Http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EIXIC And the link for the S&P 500 http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EGSPC And the link for the DOW http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EDJI 4/9
  • 5. And the link for NYSE index http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5ENYA Just take the closing prices each year and divide the new by the old to get your % change year over year. Hope that helps! *By the way, the adjusted price is the stock price adjusted for splits. So if a stock was at 100, and split 2 for 1 to 50, the adjusted price would show you the price as if the stock had always been at 50 so you can determine the real change in value of that stock over time. Chris asks… Where can I find an authoratative history of the NASDAQ composite index back to 1999? Ideally I'd like data and a visually informative chart. 5/9
  • 6. Steve Winston answers: Chart: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=%5EIXIC&t=my Data: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=%5EIXIC&a=00&b=1&c=1999&d=02&e=9&f=2006&g=d Carol asks… what does it mean when a company is removed from the nasdaq index? Steve Winston answers: Stephanie: 6/9
  • 7. It means that the stock no longer meets the listing requirements to be a part of the index. Earnings may have fallen below acceptable levels. The cash flow and stock capitalization may also no longer meet the required standards, other considerations, like revenue and operating income. It means the stock has fallen out of favor for the above reasons, and it no longer is representative of what Nasdaq wants to present to its investing public. Sandy asks… Do you think the NASDAQ composite index is going to break through the lows that it made in 2002? at the bottom of the last bear market? I think it hit 1060 intraday? 7/9
  • 8. Steve Winston answers: You betcha I think it will probably get down to 760 eventually once Obama gets in there Donna asks… What is the equation used to calculate NASDAQ index? Steve Winston answers: First, there are many NASDAQ indexes. Second, each varies in its method. Generally, once the 8/9
  • 9. stocks that are to be members of the index are chosen, the index is the the sum of (each stocks price x the number of shares in its float) divided by some arbitrary number to reduce the resultant huge number to a more resonable value. Often indexes are NOT dividend-adjusted meaning that most published US stock indexes understate long term performance by 2-5% per year. Powered by Yahoo! Answers Read More… 9/9 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)