The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (2024)

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (1)

«January»
The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (2)

Jan 3 - Aisha Day
Jan 6 - Gnorbu Day
Jan 11 - Buzz Day
Jan 14 - Sloth Day
Jan 16 - Elephante Day
Jan 29 - Kacheek Day

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (3)

Homepage
Site Prefs
F.A.Q.
Contact Us
History
Link to JN
Staff Listing
Join the Staff
Contribute to Jellyneo
Past Contests
New to Jellyneo?
Purchase Web Hosting
Help JN Stay Online!

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (4)

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (5)






The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (11)

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (12)Your jnAccount: Log In or Register | New to Jellyneo? Click here!

Have you ever considered investing in the Stock Market, but didn't know where to start? If so then don't worry, this guide was written for the thousands of Neopians who, just like you, have heard that the Stock Market is a means to make your fortune but are not quite sure how the whole thing works.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (13)
Nigel the Stockbroker Chia says "Have you considered investing in TSRC?"

What Are Stocks?

In real life, a stock (also known as a share) is a little piece of the company; if you purchase stocks, then you own a tiny percentage of the company you have invested your money in. Say, for example, you decided to purchase a stock in a new company for $1. Over time, that company might increase in value as they earn more money, until that stock which you originally only paid $1 for is now worth $5. If you owned several thousand of these stocks, you would be looking at a very large profit.

It can work both ways though. The company you invested in might lose a lot of money and the value of the shares you bought could fall to 50 cents each, or even worse, the company could go bankrupt and then your shares would be worth absolutely nothing! In the real world, investing in stocks can be a big gamble: sometimes it will pay off while other times it won't.

The Neopian Stock Market

Although they share some resemblance, the Neopian Stock Market has many differences from the real world stock market.

In the Neopian stock market, you can buy and sell shares in 43 different companies. (There are another 13 that have gone bankrupt over the years, so you cannot trade with those.)

Stock prices update every 30 minutes (plus a few seconds). There are no times when the market is "closed"; the stocks will update throughout the day, every day. Not every stock will change price at these updates; in fact, most of them will stay the same. The daily statistics of volume (the number of shares purchased) and opening price are reset at the 4pm NST update. A stock's value can never go below 6 NP, though they have no known maximum value.

Other than the current prices, the different companies are functionally indistinguishable. Years ago, the Stock Market was actually influenced by how well certain Neopian businesses did; for example, Hubert's Hot Dog stocks went up and down in value depending on how many items the shop of the same name sold. However, this led to pockets of users grouping together and buying out entire shops to inflate the value of their stocks, so The Neopets Team put a stop to that. These days, stock price updates are random, though do follow some patterns discussed later in this article.

Buying Your Stocks

The best place to buy stocks is from the Bargain Stocks page. This is a list of the cheapest stocks in Neopia at the moment. I would bookmark this link, or use your Jellyneo Dailies Service to remind yourself to visit each day.

You are only allowed to buy shares that are currently trading for 15NP or more each. When choosing a stock to purchase, the rule of thumb is "buy low, sell high," so it is best to only pick stocks trading for 15NP as that is the cheapest you can possibly purchase. However, if you choose the Cheaper by the Dozen boon from the battleground, you may purchase stocks that cost as low as 10NP!

Scroll down the list of stocks on the bargain list (the one you come to when you clicked the link above) and find the first company whose shares are trading for 15NP.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (14)

Here is a quick break down of what all the numbers mean:

  • Icon: A little picture of what category it belongs to; this doesn't really mean anything, it's just a fun way of differentiating between companies.
  • Ticker: A 2 to 5 letter ticker; think of it as a nickname.
  • Company Name: You can find a complete list of active companies here.
  • Volume: Running total of the number of that stock which has been bought that day.
  • Opening Price: How many Neopoints each stock was worth at the last daily reset.
  • Current Price: How many Neopoints the stock is currently worth.
  • Change: Percentage total of how much the price of that stock has changed during the day. A green number indicates an increase, a red number indicates a decrease.

Let us pretend that the above screenshot is what you see when you go to buy stocks for the very first time. You can see that Stuff-A-Pet Inc. and The Neopian Auction House are both trading at 15NP per share, so you could choose either one of them. To buy stocks, click on the ticker for the company you wish to purchase and you will be taken to an utterly pointless screen which lists the other companies in that category. Just click on the name of the company again and you will be taken to a screen which looks like this:

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (15)

Click on the little button and presto! Congratulations, you just bought your first set of stocks! The maximum you can purchase each day is 1,000 stocks. It is up to you whether you want to buy them all from one company or whether you want to buy a few hundred from lots of different ones.

As you buy more stocks each day, you will want to diversify your portfolio, which is just a fancy way of saying "don't put all your eggs in one basket." Stock changes are random, and it can take a long time for a company's stock to reach a point where it's worth selling. To improve your chances, you'll want to invest in as many different companies as you can. If you're choosing between multiple companies with 15NP stocks, buy the company you have the least stocks of, or buy an even amount of all of them!

The Waiting Game

Once you have bought your stocks, there isn't really anything else for you to do but to wait for them to increase until you are happy with the profit margin. It is a good idea to check your portfolio at least once a day (or more often if a particular stock is doing particularly well and you are considering selling). Here is an overview of the portfolio screen and what it all means.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (16)
Boxes with column totals will also appear at the bottom

  • Sell: Clicking on this little triangle opens up the option to sell those stocks
  • Icon, Ticker, Opening Price, Current Price, Change: Same as before.
  • Quantity: How many of that company's stock you currently own.
  • How Much You Paid: Self-explanatory, but crucial to obtaining the avatar!
  • Worth: How much your stocks would be worth if you sold them right now.
  • Change Since Buying: How much the stock has changed since you purchased them. As before, green indicates an increase and red indicates a decrease.

You will want to pay particular attention to the current price, as ultimately this will determine whether or not you want to sell your stocks. How long you wait is entirely up to you, though most players choose to sell at 60. It's a good idea to set yourself a cut-off point and stick to it. If you would rather have the Neopoints as quickly as possible then you might decide to sell off stocks once they reach 30, or even lower if you are really impatient. The only "wrong" time to sell is when your stocks are in the red, so you would be making a loss. It may seem like the best option to cut your losses and sell up before you lose even more money but hang in there, in time they will slowly start to rise again.

Years ago, companies would on occasion go bankrupt, and all money invested would be lost forever. However, it's generally believed that these were actually manual interventions by TNT, and has not happened since November of 2004, which is to say it's no longer worth being concerned about.

Unlike the real world, you are guaranteed to make a profit on all of your stocks eventually; it's just a matter of waiting.

Selling Stocks

When your stocks reach that "magic number" and you want to sell them, it's time to pay Nigel the Chia a visit. On the portfolio page, click the little triangle to the left of the icon on the stocks you want to sell. You will then get a little drop down menu asking you how much of the quantity you want to cash in.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (17)

Each batch of stocks you bought will be grouped separately, along with the individual prices of each set when you bought them and the respective increase/decrease in value. You can choose to sell all of them at once, or you can hold back some number just in case the value rockets up further. Yet again, it is entirely up to you how many or how few you choose to sell and when you choose to sell them. When you sell your stocks, you have to pay Nigel a handling fee of 20NP, however, and you can sell as many batches of stock as you like from as many different companies as you like at the same time and he will only charge you the single fee of 20NP.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (18)

The Stock Market Boon

Certain factions give the opportunity of activating the Cheaper by the Dozen boon if you side with them and they emerge victorious from the Battleground of the Obelisk. This boon allows you to purchase stocks that are selling for 10NP per share as opposed to the usual 15NP restriction, meaning that you make even more profit when selling them later.

Quick Tips

  • Use Bargain Stocks page to look for stocks.
  • Only ever buy stocks that are 15NP each (or 10NP if you have the Cheaper by the Dozen boon active). If there are none the first time you look then try checking back later in the day.
  • If you can afford it, always buy the maximum allowed 1,000 shares per day.
  • Buy stocks from different companies whenever possible.
  • Never sell at a loss.
  • Have at least 20NP on hand to pay Nigel when selling.

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (19)

Sell! SELL!! / Guide

View your stock portfolio when your "Holdings Paid" column (i.e. how much you paid for your stocks) totals over 1,000,000 Neopoints. Does not work if you simply buy 1,000 shares of a single stock worth 1k+ per share, like VPTS.

Released: October 28, 2009

Nigel the Chia

When you visit the Stock Market, you will be greeted by Nigel the Chia again, who will try to wow you with his flashy gadgets and his boast of owning the only car in Neopia. Don't let him fool you though: he has absolutely no clue what he's talking about when it comes to stocks! The random event where he suggests investing in a particular company is truly random; he has no insider knowledge.

Detailed Stock Behavior

Stocks in the Neopets Stock Market are what statisticians call Markov chains. All this means is that (1) they change values randomly but following a probability distribution and (2) that probability distribution (i.e. a stock's possible next values) depends only on the stock's current value.

All stocks at a given price will behave the same. The table in the next section shows why 60 is a popular and wise selling point—it's statistically unlikely to go much higher. However, if against great odds it makes it above 100, it may be worth holding onto—the price is more likely to float around the 3-digit numbers than to come back down!

Summary Table

The data used for this table and subsequent sections was collected by Jellyneo starting in May 2018 and was last analyzed in May 2021. If a stock has been trading in a range we are missing, please give us a heads up so we can look at the data!

More detailed distributions by range can be found in the next section.

Special credit goes to u/not-the-artist on Reddit, whose post with their own data inspired this type of analysis.

Stock Behavior

Current PriceMinimum ChangeMaximum ChangeAverage Change
60+1Increase
7-20-1+1Stay the same
21-40-2+2Stay the same
41-60-3+3Stay the same
61-100-5+5Decrease
101-150-3+3Stay the same
151-200-4+4Stay the same
201-250-5+5Stay the same
251-300-6+6Stay the same
301-350-7+7Stay the same
351-400-8+8Stay the same
401-450-9+9Decrease
451-500-10+10Decrease
501-600-3+3Stay the same
601-800-4+4Stay the same
801-1,000-5+5Stay the same
1,001-1,200-3+3Stay the same
1,201-1,600-4+4Stay the same
1,601-???-5+5Stay the same
???+Unknown—the highest stock we've recorded is 1,768!

Detailed Behavior by Value

Each section here contains a summary of the actual scraped data by Jellyneo. Some noisy/uneven graphs are likely due to relatively small sample size; it is likely that the "real" distributions programmed by Neopets are actually smoother/more even, and some average changes are actually zero.

When a range of values is grouped together (e.g. "10 to 20 NP"), then all stocks at all values in that range were found to follow the same distribution.

6 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 206,115
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.029

7 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 176,830
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.000

8 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 159,797
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.001

9 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 144,494
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.001

10 to 20 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 1,422,248
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.000

21 to 40 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 320,684
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.001

41 to 60 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 116,044
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.003

61 to 100 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 31,557
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.176

101 to 150 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 27,823
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.005

151 to 200 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 13,374
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.008

201 to 250 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 8,026
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.030

251 to 300 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 4,096
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.006

301 to 350 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 3,502
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.019

351 to 400 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 3,070
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.007

401 to 450 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 1,884
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.047

451 to 500 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 1,355
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.143

501 to 600 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 13,645
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.017

601 to 800 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 23,818
  • Avg./Exp. Change: +0.022

801 to 1,000 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 33,160
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.023

1,001 to 1,200 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 18,878
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.008

1,201 to 1,600 NP

  • Total Observations (n): 35,785
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.004

1,601+ NP

  • Total Observations (n): 5,611
  • Avg./Exp. Change: -0.033

Help us improve!

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (20)Did you find what you were looking for on this page?

This game guide was written by: Kenny and Weepit

This page was last updated on February 19, 2024.

About Us | Contact Us | Report Error | Site Prefs | Privacy Policy | My jnAccount

The Neopian Stock Market | Game Guide (2024)

FAQs

When should I sell in Neopian stock market? ›

How long you wait is entirely up to you, though most players choose to sell at 60. It's a good idea to set yourself a cut-off point and stick to it. If you would rather have the Neopoints as quickly as possible then you might decide to sell off stocks once they reach 30, or even lower if you are really impatient.

How does the Neopian stock market work? ›

What happens is, you invest in, or buy, some shares of a company at a low point, and then sell off those shares when the company's profit margin gets higher. Now, when first starting off, you will need some NP. All it really takes is 15-16k, but if you're real serious about playing, about 250k-300k is good.

Is Neopets stock market worth it? ›

Stocks can be a much better option for your neopoints than sitting in the National Neopian Bank. You have the potential to make much more than you would in interest on what you invest. However, remember that there is some risk in the stock market!

What is the best way to win the stock market game? ›

Here's what you do:
  1. Understand that stock market games are different from investing in real life. ...
  2. Make sure you invest all, or almost all, of your computer money. ...
  3. Look for stocks that are likely to go up and down a lot. ...
  4. Don't be too late. ...
  5. Check carefully for errors before submitting your trades.

What time of day is best to sell stock? ›

If you're looking for the best time to either buy or sell a stock during the trading day it is;
  • During the last 10-15 minutes before market close.
  • Or about an hour after the market opens.

When should you not sell a stock? ›

Winning stocks increase in price for a reason, and they also tend to keep winning. Don't sell a stock just because its price decreased. Every investor wants to buy low and sell high. Selling a stock just because its price fell, if the reasons you bought it still apply, is literally doing the exact opposite.

What is the 1 rule in stock market? ›

Enter the 1% rule, a risk management strategy that acts as a safety net, safeguarding your capital and fostering a disciplined approach to navigate the market's turbulent waters. In essence, the 1% rule dictates that you never risk more than 1% of your trading capital on a single trade.

What is the 50 rule in the stock market? ›

The fifty percent principle predicts that an observed trend will undergo a price correction of one-half to two-thirds of the change in price. This means that if a stock has been on an upward trend and gained 20%, it will fall back 10% before continuing its rise.

What is the rule number 1 in the stock market? ›

According to Mr. Buffett, there are only two rules to investing: Rule #1: Don't lose money, and Rule #2: Don't forget rule #1.

How to make money in Neopets Stock Market? ›

The goal of the Stock Market is to buy low, then sell high. So we'll want to purchase shares at the lowest amount possible, which is 15 NP per share. We also want to make the max investment per day possible (1,000 shares) to have the biggest payout. So, 1,000 shares at 15 NP per share equals 15,000 NP.

How do you become a millionaire on Neopets? ›

Anyway, here are some tips to help you make your first million.
  1. Get Online Daily. The first thing you should do when you enter Neopia is to collect interest on your bank account. ...
  2. Start a Routine. This begins with the dailies, but it doesn't stop there. ...
  3. Don't Spend Frivolously. ...
  4. Key Quest. ...
  5. Battledome. ...
  6. Food Club. ...
  7. Keep Saving.

Will Neopets make a comeback? ›

Neopets: Virtual pet website plans $4m comeback (BBC, July 2023) After securing $4M in funding, Neopets is on a mission to address its shortcomings and reclaim the spotlight. The team had made a promising start by revamping the homepage and restoring the mini-games.

How do you know when to sell in the stock market? ›

When to sell a stock: 7 good reasons
  1. You've found something better. ...
  2. You made a mistake. ...
  3. The company's business outlook has changed. ...
  4. Tax reasons. ...
  5. Rebalancing your portfolio. ...
  6. Valuation no longer reflects business reality. ...
  7. You need the money. ...
  8. The stock has gone up.
Apr 19, 2024

At what point should you sell your shares? ›

If a stock price plunges because of a significant and long-term change in the company's outlook, that's a good reason to sell. Virtually all stocks, even the bluest of the blue chips, experience temporary setbacks and then move back upwards. Averaging down in such cases is a strategy to consider.

At what return should you sell stock? ›

When a stock is going the right direction, your decision making is not as easy. How long should you hold? Here's a specific rule to help boost your prospects for long-term stock investing success: Once your stock has broken out, take most of your profits when they reach 20% to 25%.

What date is best to sell a stock? ›

If Monday may be the best day of the week to buy stocks, then Thursday or early Friday may be the best day to sell stock—before prices dip.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jamar Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 6335

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (55 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jamar Nader

Birthday: 1995-02-28

Address: Apt. 536 6162 Reichel Greens, Port Zackaryside, CT 22682-9804

Phone: +9958384818317

Job: IT Representative

Hobby: Scrapbooking, Hiking, Hunting, Kite flying, Blacksmithing, Video gaming, Foraging

Introduction: My name is Jamar Nader, I am a fine, shiny, colorful, bright, nice, perfect, curious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.