Big Money
Part 3

Companies & Markets

How a company is born, sells slices of itself, and trades on a market wired in milliseconds.
12 · What is a company?   13 · Owning a slice: shares
14 · Why companies sell shares   15 · What is an IPO?
16 · An IPO in action   17 · What is a stock exchange?
18 · Inside the exchange: the backend   19 · Clearing & settlement
20 · How to actually buy a share   21 · The scoreboard: indexes
22 · Funds & ETFs   23 · Crypto markets & exchanges
Part 3 · Companies & markets

What is a company?

An idea, turned into a thing that can be owned, grown, and sold.

A company is a legal "person" separate from its founders. It can own assets, sign contracts, make a profit, and — crucially — be divided into shares of ownership. That last trick is what lets it raise money from strangers and outlive whoever started it.

From idea to owned thing

Registering a company turns a hustle into an asset.

An idea Register a companya legal "person" Owns & employsmakes a profit Split intoshares

Limited liability

You risk only your stake

If it fails, you lose what you put in — not your house.

It outlives you

Forever

A company can keep going long after its founder is gone.

Top 5 · most valuable companies

Ranked by market value, late 2025 (approximate).

  1. Nvidia ~US$4.5T
  2. Apple ~US$4.0T
  3. Microsoft ~US$3.7T
  4. Alphabet (Google) ~US$2.5T
  5. Amazon ~US$2.4T
Money WordLimited liability The rule that an owner can only lose the money they invested in a company — their personal wealth is protected if the business fails. It's what makes investing in strangers' companies safe enough to do.
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Owning a slice: shares

A share is a literal piece of a company — and a claim on its future.

Buy one share and you own a sliver of the whole business: its factories, its brand, its profits. If the company does well — paying dividends or growing — your slice is worth more. If it fails, your slice can fall to zero. That's the deal: real ownership, real risk.

One company, divided into shares

Own one share and a slice of everything is yours.

you 1 share of the whole company A share gives you: • a vote on big decisions • a cut of the profits (dividend) • a claim on future growth

Dividend

Your cut

Many companies pay out part of their profit to shareholders.

Capital gain

Buy low, sell high

The other way to win: the share itself rises in value.

Local → Global

Singapore
1 share of an SGX company
=
Global
1 share of Apple
Money WordDividend A slice of a company's profit paid out to shareholders, usually as cash. Not every company pays one — some reinvest it all to grow faster.
Know what you own, and know why you own it.
— Peter Lynch, investor
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Why companies sell shares

Because selling part of your company is often the fastest way to grow it.

A growing company needs money — for factories, staff, expansion. It can borrow it (debt) or sell ownership (equity). Selling shares brings in cash that never has to be repaid; the price is giving away a slice of future profits and control. Borrowing keeps control but must be repaid with interest.

Two ways to raise money

Every company chooses some mix of these.

DEBTborrow moneyrepay it + interestyou keep full control EQUITYsell sharesnever repay ityou give up a slice of ownership

Debt

Borrow & repay

Cheaper if it works, dangerous if profits dip — you still owe.

Equity

Share the upside

No repayment, but new owners share every future profit.

Local → Global

Singapore
A startup raising its first round
=
Global
Google selling shares to the world
Money WordEquity Ownership in a company. When you "raise equity," you sell part of the company for cash instead of borrowing.
Capital isn't scarce; vision is.
— Sam Walton, founder of Walmart
Part 3 · Companies & markets

What is an IPO?

The day a private company throws open its doors, sells shares to the public for the first time — and often raises a fortune.

IPO stands for Initial Public Offering. Until that day, a company is private — owned by its founders and a few investors. An IPO lets anyone buy a slice, turning private owners into public shareholders and handing the company a wall of cash to grow with.

From private company to publicly traded — in 5 steps

What actually happens between "we want to list" and shares trading on the exchange.

1A private company wants to growIt needs serious money — more than banks or founders can supply. 2It hires an investment bankThe "underwriter" prepares the deal and guarantees the sale. 3It files a prospectus & sets a priceA public document reveals the finances; a share price is fixed. 4Shares are sold to investorsBig institutions buy first, then the wider public. 5It "lists" — shares trade freelyOn day one the price floats on supply and demand, on the exchange.

Why do it?

Raise capital

The company sells new shares and pockets the cash to expand.

The trade-off

Total scrutiny

Going public means revealing your numbers and answering to shareholders.

Top 5 · biggest IPOs in history

Ranked by money raised at listing (approximate).

  1. SpaceX ~US$75B · 2026
  2. Saudi Aramco ~US$25.6B · 2019
  3. Alibaba ~US$21.8B · 2014
  4. SoftBank Corp ~US$21.3B · 2018
  5. NTT Mobile ~US$18.1B · 1998
Money WordUnderwriter The investment bank that prices new shares, buys them from the company, and resells them — guaranteeing the company gets paid even if demand is soft.
Part 3 · Companies & markets

An IPO in action

Watch the numbers move on the day a company goes public.

Say a Singapore company offers 100 million shares at S$1 each. It raises S$100 million. On listing day, demand is hot and the price jumps to S$1.50 — but the company already has its cash; now investors are trading among themselves. Globally the same script runs, just with more zeros — SpaceX's 2026 listing raised US$75 billion.

The numbers on listing day

The company raises money once; the price then floats.

100m shares × S$1S$100mraised by the company day-1 priceS$1.50the "pop" now valued atS$150mmarket cap

The "pop"

+50%

The day-1 jump — exciting, but it doesn't add a cent to the company.

Who gets the cash

The company, once

After that, investors just trade shares with each other.

Local → Global

Singapore
An S$100m SGX listing
=
Global record
SpaceX's US$75B listing (2026)
Money WordMarket capitalisation A company's total value on the market: share price × number of shares. At S$1.50 × 100m shares, that's S$150m.
In the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine.
— Benjamin Graham, investor
Part 3 · Companies & markets

What is a stock exchange?

A giant, regulated marketplace where shares change hands.

An exchange is where buyers and sellers of shares meet — today almost entirely through computers. It sets fair prices, enforces rules, and makes sure trades actually happen. Singapore's is the Singapore Exchange (SGX); the giants are New York's NYSE and Nasdaq.

The marketplace in the middle

Buyers and sellers never meet — the exchange connects them.

Buyers EXCHANGEmatches & polices Sellers It provides: fair prices · rules · liquidity

Liquidity

Easy in, easy out

A good exchange lets you buy or sell fast at a fair price.

"Listed"

On the board

A listed company is one whose shares trade on the exchange.

Where it comes from

Bourse — Europe’s word for an exchange — comes from the Van der Beurze family, whose inn in Bruges was where merchants gathered to trade in the 1300s.

Money WordLiquidity How easily something can be bought or sold without moving its price. Cash is the most liquid; a house is not.
The stock market is filled with people who know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.
— Philip Fisher, investor
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Inside the exchange: the backend

When you press "buy," a hidden machine springs into action in milliseconds.

Behind the app is the order book — a live list of everyone wanting to buy or sell, and at what price. A matching engine pairs the highest willing buyer with the lowest willing seller in a fraction of a second. The "price" you see is simply the latest match.

The order book

Buyers (bids) on one side, sellers (asks) on the other — they meet in the middle.

BIDS · buyers buy 500 @ $9.98 buy 800 @ $9.99 buy 300 @ $10.00 ASKS · sellers sell 400 @ $10.01 sell 700 @ $10.02 sell 600 @ $10.03 matching enginetrade @ ~$10.00

Order book

The live list

Every bid and ask, stacked by price, updating constantly.

Matching engine

Microseconds

Software pairs buyers and sellers faster than you can blink.

Local → Global

Singapore
SGX's matching engine
=
Global
NYSE & Nasdaq systems
Money WordOrder book The real-time list of all the buy and sell orders for a share, organised by price. The gap between the best buy and best sell price is the "spread."
The big money is not in the buying and selling, but in the waiting.
— Charlie Munger, investor
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Clearing & settlement

A trade isn't really finished the instant you click. An invisible system makes it real.

After a match, the trade must clear and settle: the shares move to the buyer, the cash to the seller, with a clearing house guaranteeing neither side defaults. In Singapore the Central Depository (CDP) holds your shares; globally the giant is America's Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). This plumbing usually takes a day or two — "T+1" or "T+2".

The invisible plumbing

A trusted middleman guarantees the swap actually happens.

Trade matchedon the exchange Clearing houseguarantees both sides Settlementshares ↔ cash DoneT+1 / T+2

Clearing house

The guarantor

Steps between buyer and seller so neither can be cheated.

T+1 / T+2

A day or two

How long until the trade is truly final and irreversible.

Local → Global

Singapore
Central Depository (CDP)
=
United States
Depository Trust & Clearing Corp (DTCC)
Money WordSettlement The final step where ownership and money actually change hands after a trade. Until settlement, a trade is agreed but not yet complete.
Trust, but verify.
— Russian proverb
Part 3 · Companies & markets

How to actually buy a share

For the price of a meal, anyone can own a piece of the world's biggest companies.

You open an account with a broker — an app that connects you to the exchange. Deposit money, search a company, place an order. In Singapore, Tiger Brokers and moomoo made this cheap and easy; globally it's Interactive Brokers, Schwab and Robinhood. Fractional shares even let you buy part of one pricey share.

Four steps to your first share

The whole thing takes minutes on a phone.

1 · Open accountwith a broker app 2 · Add moneye.g. PayNow 3 · Pick a companysearch the ticker 4 · Place order→ to the exchange

Fractional shares

Buy a sliver

Own part of one expensive share — start with a few dollars.

Brokerage fee

Often tiny

Competition has pushed trading costs close to zero.

Then vs now

$0

What a stock trade costs today. In 1990 the same trade ran about $50 — the broker's cut competed down to nothing.

Money WordBroker A licensed middleman (today, usually an app) that places your buy and sell orders on the exchange for you.
Part 3 · Companies & markets

The scoreboard: indexes

One number that tells you how a whole market is doing.

An index tracks a basket of companies so you can see the market's mood at a glance. Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) follows 30 of the biggest SGX companies. America's S&P 500 (Standard & Poor's 500) follows 500 giants and is the world's most-watched scoreboard.

Many companies, one number

An index bundles lots of shares into a single reading.

a basket of companies averaged together… one index numberSTI = 30 cos · S&P 500 = 500 cos

STI

Top 30

Singapore's headline index — the 30 biggest names on SGX.

S&P 500

500 giants

The global benchmark — when people say "the market," they often mean this.

A moment in history

The Dow Jones began in 1896 with just 12 companies. Not one of those originals is still in the index today — the "market" is always quietly replacing itself.

Money WordIndex A single figure that tracks the combined value of a chosen group of companies, used to gauge how a whole market is performing.
Don't look for the needle in the haystack. Just buy the haystack.
— John Bogle, founder of Vanguard
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Funds & ETFs

Buy hundreds of companies in a single click.

A fund pools many investors' money to buy lots of shares at once. An ETF (exchange-traded fund) is a fund you can buy on the exchange like a single share. One purchase of an S&P 500 ETF makes you a part-owner of 500 companies — instant diversification, tiny fees. Diversification is how you protect wealth — though, as Part 5 shows, big fortunes are first made through concentration.

One purchase, hundreds of companies

An ETF is a ready-made basket you buy in one click.

Buy 1 ETFone click …own 500 companies inside …and hundreds more

Diversification

Spread the risk

If one company sinks, the other 499 cushion the blow.

Low fees

Under 0.1%

Index ETFs cost a tiny fraction of what old-style funds charge.

The one number

0.03%

A typical S&P 500 ETF’s yearly fee — about $3 a year on $10,000. Old-style funds charged 30 times more.

Money WordETF An exchange-traded fund: a basket of many investments that trades on the exchange like a single share. The easy way to own a whole market at once.
Diversification is the only free lunch in investing.
— Harry Markowitz, Nobel laureate
Part 3 · Companies & markets

Crypto markets & exchanges

The same buying and selling — but in a wilder, always-open arena.

Crypto trades on its own exchanges (like Binance or Coinbase), 24/7, with no closing bell. Prices can swing double digits in a day. Unlike SGX, there's usually no central clearing house and far lighter rules — more freedom, but far more risk.

Stock exchange vs crypto exchange

Same idea — fewer guardrails.

Stock exchange (SGX) Hours: set, 9–5Rules: heavySwings: lowerClearing: yes (CDP) Crypto exchange Hours: 24/7, no bellRules: lightSwings: highClearing: often none

Always open

24/7

No closing bell — prices move while you sleep.

Buyer beware

High risk

Lighter rules and bigger swings mean more ways to lose.

Insider tell

Crypto never closes — no bell, no clearing house, no last line of defence. The guard-rails a real exchange takes for granted simply aren’t there.

Money WordVolatility How much and how fast a price moves up and down. High volatility means big swings — bigger chances to win, and to lose.