GnuCash User Manual | ||
---|---|---|
<<< Previous | Updating Share Prices and Currency Values | Next >>> |
The price editor is available from the "Tools" menu. Selecting it brings up the editor:
Each entry in the editor shows a record of a price:
Commodity: what the price is for.
Currency: what the price is recorded in. To take a simple example, IBM stock's commodity is IBM, and the currency would be USD, as prices are almost always quoted in US dollars.
Date: when the price is/was for.
Source: where the price quote came from. Typically, this will be either "user:price-editor" (indicating you entered it directly) or "Finance::Quote", indicating that it was retrieved from an online source by the Finance::Quote module that GnuCash uses for this task.
Type: There are several different types of stock price quotes, and to explain the technicalities requires a little understanding of the stock market. Most stocks, on most markets, have specialist dealers who are almost always willing to buy and sell that stock, and make a little profit along the way by by buying and selling at slightly different prices.<
Bid prices indicate what a specialist dealer is prepared to pay for a stock.
Ask prices indicates what the dealers are prepared to sell a stock for - naturally, this is slightly higher than the bid price.
Last prices indicate the price at which the last trade in that stock/security occurred at. This is the price most commonly quoted in the media.
Net Asset Value prices are typically used for mutual funds. They are calculated on the net value of the fund's assets.
UnknownAs the name suggests, use this if the type of price quoted is not known.
Price: the actual price.
You can choose how you'd like the list of prices sorted by clicking on the appropriate "Sort by . . ." radio button directly below the price list.
<<< Previous | Home | Next >>> |
Updating Share Prices and Currency Values | Up | Updating prices manually |