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Economics & The Stock Market Game

Economics & The Stock Market Game. Grades 7 & 8. Why Save? Lesson 1. A Fact About Saving and Spending. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, on average we spend ______ % of our disposable income. 97. What Is Disposable Income?. Disposable income = consumption + savings

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Economics & The Stock Market Game

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  1. Economics & The Stock Market Game Grades 7 & 8

  2. Why Save?Lesson 1

  3. A Fact About Saving and Spending • According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, on average we spend ______ % of our disposable income. 97

  4. What Is Disposable Income? • Disposable income = consumption + savings • Savings = Disposable income - consumption

  5. Where does it come from? Allowances Gifts Chores All money truly comes from God. Our Money?

  6. Activity 1 • What do you think is meant by this statement: “Pay yourself first”? • “Pay yourself first” means that a person saves before spending money on goods and services. • What are some reasons why people save? • People save money to: • Gain the satisfaction of purchasing a special gift • Make large purchases • Meet emergencies that might arise • Because the money will be matched for…

  7. Simple Interest Yr 1 – add $8 Yr 2 – add $8 Yr 3 – add $8 Yr 4 – add $8 Yr 5 – add $8 Yr 6 – add $8 Yr 7 – add $8 Yr 8 – add $8 Yr 9 – add $8 Compound Interest Yr 1 – add $8 Yr 2 – add $9 Yr 3 – add $9 Yr 4 – add $10 Yr 5 – add $11 Yr 6 – add $12 Yr 7 – add $12 Yr 8 – add $14 Yr 9 – add $15 Saving in a Bank

  8. What’s the Difference? • What did you notice about the accumulation of simple interest? • It increased by the same amount ($8) each year. • What did you notice about the accumulation of compound interest? • It increased by more each year. • The $100 initially saved double after 9 years.

  9. Simple Interest Equation • Simple interest = Principal (amount of initial savings) X Rate (of interest being paid on saving) X Time (in years)

  10. Want To Double Your Money? • Rule of 72 • 72 divided by the Rate (of interest being paid on savings) = the number of years it will take for savings to double when interest is allowed to compound • For example: • 72 divided by 8% = 9 years • At the end of nine years, the initial savings of $100 will have increased to $200 – double the amount of initial savings

  11. In Review • What is savings? • Savings is disposable income minus consumption. • What is the simple interest – Initial savings are $1000; Interest rate is 5%; Time is 5 years? • $1,000 X 5% X 5 years = $250 • At an interest rate of 3 percent, how long would it take to double your initial savings? • 72 divided by 3 = 24 years

  12. ASSIGNMENT!!!

  13. Investors and InvestmentsLesson 2

  14. A Difference In Meanings • A father and his teenage daughter are talking about shows. Dad is talking about movies. The daughter is talking about rock concerts. • Two people are watching an NBA basketball player play very well. One says, “He’s bad!” The second person is confused because the player is playing very well. • One student says that she studies four hours a night as an investment. Her friend doesn’t think that studying can be an investment, since no money is involved.

  15. What Is Investing? • When people invest, they spend something now (it can include time and effort as well as money) in an effort to gain something in the future.

  16. Not All Investments Are Alike • Personal Investing • One type of financial investing, practiced by individuals. • It involves depositing or spending money in an effort to make a financial gain in the future. • People who buy stocks or bonds are engaged in personal investing. • Economic Investing • Involves spending money to buy capital goods (including machinery, technology, and new buildings) used to make consumer goods and services. • When a company buys new computers or new delivery trucks, it is engaged in economic investing.

  17. Personal Personal Economic Personal Not Economic Personal Not Personal Economic Activity 1 What similarities can you find in these examples of investment? • Each involves risk and payment in money or effort now in order for the investor to receive a future benefit.

  18. Criteria For Investing • Liquidity • The ease with which savings or investments can be turned into cash • Risk • The chance of losing some or all of the money invested • Return • Earnings from an investment

  19. Activity 2

  20. Activity 2 • Based on your rankings, which investment would you make with the $1,000? • Which criterion was most important to you, and why? • Are there other criteria that might influence your decision to invest? Explain. • Social issues • Companies that harm the environment • Companies that encourage smoking

  21. In Review • What is the difference between personal investing and economic investing? • Personal investing involves setting money aside to increase wealth over a period of time. • Economic investing involves the purchase of capital goods used to make consumer goods and services. • What are the three criteria most often used by investors to judge personal investments? • Liquidity, risk, and return

  22. ASSIGNMENT!!!

  23. Invest In YourselfLesson 3

  24. Human Capital • The knowledge, skills, health, and values that individuals possess • Developed through investing in: • Formal education • Informal education

  25. Why Invest In Human Capital? • To learn something new • To learn to do something better • To get a specific job • To start a new job

  26. What Is Income? • Payment people receive for selling or renting their productive resources • People receive wages or salary payments for the work they do

  27. Automotive technician Carpenter Family doctor Graphic designer Interpreter Mechanical engineer Medical technician Retail sales clerk School bus driver $ 24,315 $ 33,467 $ 118,394 $ 36,026 $ 31,990 $ 61,443 $ 27,300 $ 17,139 $ 21,986 Average Yearly Income

  28. High school diploma Bachelor’s degree Master’s degree Professional degree Doctoral degree (Ph.D.) $ 507 $ 834 $ 983 $ 1,174 $ 1,214 Average Weekly Income $ 25,350 $ 41,700 $ 49,150 $ 58,700 $ 60,700

  29. Opportunity Cost • The next-best alternative that people give up when they make a choice • Costs associated with investment in human capital • Tuition and fees • Books • Extra income

  30. What’s The Cost? • Sam can choose one elective course in his freshman year. The options he prefers are woodworking, current events, and art class. He chooses the art class. What is his opportunity cost? • Sam has been taking art classes for some time. He hopes to continue to paint and may even choose a career in art. By taking an additional art class, what is Sam doing? • Investing in his human capital

  31. Investments Pay Off • Lifetime earnings of someone with a high school degree working 54 years $ 25,350 X 54 = • Lifetime earnings of someone with a bachelor’s degree working 50 years $ 41,700 X 50 = • The difference? $ 2,085,000 - $ 1,368,900 = $ 1,368,900 $ 2,085,000 $716,100

  32. In Review • What is human capital? • The knowledge, skills, health, and values individuals possess • Give an example of human capital that you have. • Abilities to read, write, compute, work in groups, play a sport, play an instrument… • How do people invest in their human capital? • By going to school, finishing high school, going to college, attending training programs, practicing their skills, living a health lifestyle.

  33. In Review • Why do people invest in their human capital? • To learn new skills, to obtain a new job, to earn more income, to improve skills and talents they already have. • What is income? • Payments people receive for selling or renting the productive resources they own • What is opportunity cost? • The next-best alternative that people give up when they make a choice

  34. ASSIGNMENT!!!

  35. What Is A Stock?Lesson 4

  36. You Are A Household • Income • Payments earned by households for selling or renting their productive services • Saving • Income not spent on consumption or taxes • Stockholders • Partial owners of a company

  37. Stocks represent ownership in a corporation. 50% written as a decimal is 5/100. Mark bought 100 shares of Nike stock, and each share sold for $35.50. If no fees were involved, Mark paid $3,550 for the shares. If Jenny has $100 in a savings account and earns 2% interest this month, she has earned $20 in interest. The closing price for a share of Wal-Mart stock was 37.25. This means that the price of the share was $37 and one-quarter of a dollar. One-quarter of a dollar is .20. True False True False False Activity 1

  38. People who own stocks are guaranteed a return on the money they have invested in stocks. The only way stockholders make money is through dividend payments while they own stock. One way stockholders make money is to sell their stock for more than they paid for it. Stockholders can reduce the risk on their stock investment by diversifying their portfolios. The New York Stock Exchange is the only place where people can buy and sell stocks. False False True True False Activity 1

  39. Activity 1 Questions • If your group answered all ten questions correctly, how many shares of stock would the group own? • 150 • How do you think this game is different from occasions when dividends are distributed in real life?

  40. Stocks and Corporations • What is stock? • Part ownership in a corporation • Why do corporations issue stock? • To raise money to pay for equipment, buildings, and operating expenses

  41. Investment Bankers • When the shares of stock are first issued, to whom are they sold? • To investment bankers • Why do investment bankers buy the stock? • They expect to resell the stocks to the public for a higher price in the secondary market. • How does the corporation get money from the stocks? • Investment bankers pay for the stocks

  42. Stock Markets • What are stock markets? • Places or ways in which people can buy and sell stocks. • Why do people buy stock? • They expect to earn money.

  43. Earning Money • How do people earn money from stocks? • To make a capital gain by selling the stock at a higher price than the price they paid for the stock. • They may also receive dividends. • What are dividends? • Part of the company’s profits, distributed to owners

  44. Risk vs. Reward • Is there a guarantee that stockholders will be able to sell at a higher price? • No • If there’s no guarantee, why are people willing to buy stock? • Because the stocks they buy might provide them with a higher return than the return they would get by putting money into other financial investments or a savings account.

  45. Price of Stock • What determines the price of stock? • The value of a stock depends on whether stockholders want to keep or sell the stock and on how much those who want to buy the stock are willing to pay for it.

  46. Advantages vs. Disadvantages • What is the main advantage of owning stock? • Sharing in the company’s profits as the company grows • Having a chance to get an above-average return on a financial investment. • What is the main disadvantage of owning stock? • The chance of losing all or part of the investment

  47. Diversifying a Portfolio • To spread out or vary investments • Stock in: • Electric company • Computer company • Entertainment company • Food company

  48. Mutual Funds • A pool of money collected from different people and invested by a manager with the goal of increasing the value of each share of the fund for its investors.

  49. ASSIGNMENT!!!

  50. Reading the Financial Pages: In Print and OnlineLesson 5

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