What Is A Stock
What Is A Stock
What Is A Stock
Stocks are bought and sold predominantly on stock exchanges, though there can
be private sales as well, and are the foundation of many individual investors'
portfolios. These transactions have to conform to government regulations which
are meant to protect investors from fraudulent practices. Historically, they have
outperformed most other investments over the long run. These investments can
be purchased from most online stock brokers. Stock investment differs greatly
from real estate investment.
Understanding Stocks
Corporations issue (sell) stock to raise funds to operate their businesses. The
holder of stock (a shareholder) has now bought a piece of the corporation and,
depending on the type of shares held, may have a claim to a part of its assets
and earnings. In other words, a shareholder is now an owner of the issuing
company. Ownership is determined by the number of shares a person owns
relative to the number of outstanding shares. For example, if a company has
1,000 shares of stock outstanding and one person owns 100 shares, that person
would own and have claim to 10% of the company's assets and earnings.
Owning stock gives you the right to vote in shareholder meetings, receive
dividends (which are the company’s profits) if and when they are distributed, and
it gives you the right to sell your shares to somebody else.
If you own a majority of shares, your voting power increases so that you can
indirectly control the direction of a company by appointing its board of directors.
This becomes most apparent when one company buys another: the acquiring
company doesn’t go around buying up the building, the chairs, the employees; it
buys up all the shares. The board of directors is responsible for increasing the
value of the corporation, and often does so by hiring professional managers, or
officers, such as the Chief Executive Officer, or CEO.
For most ordinary shareholders, not being able to manage the company isn't
such a big deal. The importance of being a shareholder is that you are entitled to
a portion of the company's profits, which, as we will see, is the foundation of a
stock’s value. The more shares you own, the larger the portion of the profits you
get. Many stocks, however, do not pay out dividends, and instead reinvest profits
back into growing the company. These retained earnings, however, are still
reflected in the value of a stock.