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Transcripts for the above video clip:
Excel 2007 Graphs Stock Charts
Stock charts are
very useful for plotting what happens on the stock market with share
prices. However they
have other uses as well. But
let’s first explain in the context of stock data.
Here we have some
data relating to a particular stock.
We have the various days, we have what the stock opened at,
what the high for the day was, what the low for the day was and what
the closing price was. To
turn this into a stock chart, we highlight it, we go Insert, Other
charts, and you’ll see the stock charts have a couple of options.
For now we are going to use the second one, which requires
that you have an opening, a high, a low and a close.
When I click on it, the following chart is generated. Let’s
understand what this chart is saying. Let’s look at the last day,
which relates to this one here. What you’ll see is the opening, in
this case is the bottom line- the high is represented by a line that
goes up, so you’ll see if the high is above the opening or the
close, the line will point out, the low, similar, below, and
the close represented by another line. So we have a box here. If
in this case it is white, it means that that was the opening,
it went up and closed there. There’s the
high, there’s the low. If
it is a dark colour, we opened over there, we closed below. So
that’s how it is represents up and down. For
the most part, the ability to format and customize
the chart is exactly the same – all the same options exist.
The one difference is, if you hover, and you hover
close to the edge – you’ll see that’s a series. If we
hover a little bit lower, you’ll see it tells you Up Bars. When we
go to the dark colour, you’ll see it says Down Bars.
If we hover over that, and right click, we can actually
format the Up Bars and
in this case, at the moment, it is saying it is automatically going
to fill it, but let’s put a solid fill and because
that’s an Up, let’s make it
green. You’ll
see now all the Ups turn green. The
same when I format the Down – so you can use a different colour
for ups and downs. I am
going to make that red – close it. So maybe this is more
descriptive – green is good, red is bad. You can see what is
happening here. So, for
example, if it turns out that this number wasn’t actually 47, but
let’s make it, maybe, 40 – you’ll see what has happened the
scale has changed as well. We
have now shown that this last day was a bad day – negative day,
opened at that number, went down all the way to this number. The
high was here and the close was presumably somewhere in here. I am
just going to undo that.
Now that’s useful
if you follow the stock market but how can this help the normal
Excel user? This is
where you can use this particular chart to actually create something
called a Waterfall chart. The best way,
let me explain, show you what it does and you can see why it is so
useful. Here what we
have – I have got the open, high, low, close – but what this is
trying to show is we want to start with the budgeted profit –
you’ll see that’s 100, we want to explain that, because of
retrenchments, that profit has dropped to 90, because of, for
example, electricity hikes it is now down to 80, but a selling price
increase has resulted in it going back up to 110. You can use these
charts to show what is causing an up or causing a down. So
let’s go here – we’ll say Insert – go to Stock and in this
case, because I have got open, high, low and close,
I click this one. I have just put the open, high, low, close,
just to help me understand what the numbers need to
be, they are not actually relevant to the numbers. Just looking here
you’ll see the result is open, high, low, close – it doesn’t
quite look right. Let’s see what happens if we switch the rows and
columns. Suddenly now we have got a graph which is a little more
meaningful. Let’s look at what it is saying – it’s telling us
that our budgeted profit was 100. Because of additional
retrenchments, it cost us 10 so we are down to 90, because of
electricity hikes another 10, we are down to 80. But we have
increased the selling price and hence the budgeted profit actually
goes all the way up. So
that’s a very nice way of representing movements in budgets.
Let’s just see how
we have tricked it into doing this. You’ll see that we are able to
set up a spreadsheet to handle all of these things. We know that the
budgeted profit – we want it to show the full value, so we are
going to start with a zero – you’ll see I have typed in a zero. The
high and the low, because we don’t actually care at the moment for
these lines, I am just going to make it equal to the opening. So in
both cases, it just equals this cell, which means we won’t see
them, and the closing is where it must close.
So, if maybe, this is not correct, I can actually
start at 100 and you’ll now see we have a very thin line
– and perhaps that is what you want, but in most cases I would
like to show it like that. So
that’s the close. In
order for it to flow, the close of the one needs to be the opening
of the other. So
therefore, you’ll see I have just set it up – you’ll see it is
equal to that cell – the high and the low are just
linked to this cell so there’s no real thought involved
there. And the close needs to be the result of the impact – so you
can see we now need to go from 100 down to 90 which implies a 10
amount cost. And so we go on. You’ll
see that the most important part of setting up this graph is
actually getting the spreadsheet part of it correct, in a nice
usable format, so that next time something comes, we can say, for
whatever reason, I just need to change
this number, so let’s say that our selling price increase
didn’t materialize, so the net answer is 95 and you’ll see the
graph reflects it. Again,
as shown previously, you can format
it to show colours, just to make it a little bit more
descriptive.
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