I’m very curious to how a company listed on the stock exchange internal data looks. Same for every company computer screen/ software layout I am assuming maybe based on what exchange they are listed under?
Example: like does Amazon, $AMZN, have a software that’s given to them from the NASDAQ that shows their stock price chart, volume, EMA, maybe some more things for them to see chart related. Then they can see their constantly changing market cap and P/E ratio. They can see documents filed by the company, investor’s filings, articles from authors including themselves listed on there. Do they see banks and or the Fed pushing them loans, interest rates, and terms on a table chart that they can choose from? Or is it just companies call up a bank they want and talk to them about a loan? I know people fund their market cap but the company can’t just go and sell their shares constantly, so they keep their shares and give them to their employees, and also buy them back. Then they can push up cash/ shares to borrow against and get back those shares once they pay off the loan or do their shares not ever go to the bank and are held? The ladder? Do they have their live account balances in terms of their cash and asset holdings debt to these banks?
The more the market cap and the higher P/E ratio the more the people believe in the company and want to fund them. So, the company has access to more cash, can get better rates and terms from banks pushing them loans to choose from.
I am really integrated in how the stock market data looks from the inside of a company that’s publicly traded.
Submitted May 19, 2023 at 02:51AM by LovingNatureBea https://ift.tt/ygGLMaX