Learn what the equity market is, how companies raise capital there, and why it matters for investors, businesses, and the broader economy.
The equity market is the part of the financial system where ownership interests in companies are issued and traded. In everyday language, it overlaps heavily with the stock market, but the phrase “equity market” is often used in a more institutional sense to describe how public ownership capital is raised and exchanged.
The equity market has two major layers. In the primary market, a company raises new capital by issuing shares, often through an initial public offering or a follow-on offering. In the secondary market, those already-issued shares trade among investors on exchanges and other trading venues.
That distinction matters because only primary-market issuance sends new money to the company itself. Secondary trading mainly changes who owns the shares and what price the market assigns to them.
Equity prices are driven by expectations about future cash flow, growth, risk, and investor sentiment. When buyers become more optimistic about a firm’s prospects, the price investors are willing to pay for its shares tends to rise. When expected profits, growth, or confidence weaken, prices can fall.
Because of this, the equity market is both a financing mechanism and a running valuation system. It helps determine how cheaply or expensively a company can raise capital.
For companies, the equity market provides access to permanent risk capital that does not have to be repaid like debt. For investors, it offers a claim on future profits through dividends, retained earnings, and potential price appreciation. For the wider economy, it helps allocate capital toward businesses that the market believes can use it productively.
That is why equity-market conditions often affect everything from corporate fundraising to retirement portfolios to broader market confidence.