Give a name related to the stock.

Names are generally meaningful, so it's good to listen. Just follow the name. Suggestions are meaningful, such as only rising but not falling, partial wealth of the stock market, the final winner rising the stock market, the sea dragon king, the stock market elite, stock surfing, floating red world, cattle all over the city, the stock market all over the world, and so on.

When the word N appears in front of the stock name, it means that the stock is newly listed that day, and the letter N is the abbreviation of English new. When investors see an N-prefix stock, they should not only know that it is a new stock, but also realize that the share price of this stock is not limited by the fluctuation of the market price that day. The increase can be higher than 10%, and the decrease can be deeper than 10%. This makes it easier to control risks and seize investment opportunities.

When the word XD appears before the stock name, it means that the date is the ex-dividend date of the stock, and XD is the abbreviation of English Exclusion Divided. On the ex-dividend date, the benchmark price of the stock price is lower than the closing price of the previous trading day, because the interest difference is deducted from it.

When the word XR appears in front of the stock name, it means that this day is the ex-dividend date of the stock. XR is the abbreviation of English Exclusion Right. The ex-dividend stock price is also lower than the closing price of the previous trading day, because the expansion of the number of shares dilutes the stock price.

When the word DR appears before the stock name, it means that the day is the ex-dividend date and ex-dividend date of this stock. D stands for dividend (interest) and R stands for right. Some listed companies not only pay dividends, but also send bonus shares or allotment, so there is a phenomenon of ex-dividend and ex-dividend at the same time.

The net value of a stock, also known as book value and net assets per share, is the net assets per share calculated by accounting statistics. Its calculation method is to divide the company's net assets (including registered capital, various accumulation funds, accumulated surplus, etc.) by the total share capital (excluding debts) to get the net value per share. The higher the book value of a joint-stock company, the more assets shareholders actually own. Because book value is the result of financial statistics and calculation, the data is accurate and reliable, so it is one of the important basis for stock investors to evaluate and analyze the strength of listed companies. Shareholders should pay attention to this data of listed companies.