Yes you can trade Pink Sheet stocks as well as OTC (over the counter) and Bulletin Board stocks.
Pink sheet stock picks abound on the Internet, so if you're determined to put your money in penny stocks, do your research. Educate yourself, first: http://seekingalpha.com/article/62243-understanding-pink-sheets-stocks
Pink sheet stocks can help one to achieve long term saving goals. One can only help to save for long term savings. Pink sheet stocks are a good way to invest.
GMGMQ.PK is a "pink sheet" listing. It is a symbol used for very high risk stock.
Reebok is a subsidiary of Adidas. Adidas trades on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol ADS. In the United States, it is a pink sheet stock.
Many people think that pink sheet stocks are too risky or not worth the time to look at, but the truth is that the pink sheets can provide investors with the same amount of profit potential vs risk that the blue chips can. Pink sheets must be handled in a much more delicate manner, however. The capital needed to properly diversify in a pink sheet portfolio is much higher than in a blue chip portfolio, because of the more volatile nature of the pink sheet stocks. However, with a higher investment pool, a properly diversified pink sheet portfolio has historically provided similar returns to the regular stock market.
The simplest answer is that 'stock' are the physical items on the shelves. A stock sheet is a list of those items.
a sheet of stock takings ?
closing stock will increase current assets in Balance sheet
=Opening stock+receipt - issue = closing stock
There is probably no SAfety Data Sheet for nylon bar stock because it is an artcle, not a chemical.
Pink sheet stocks are stocks that are traded over the counter and not through an exchange. Their name comes from the color of paper they used to be printed on. Pink sheet stocks tend to represent companies that are too small or do not meet the requirements of an exchange. It is the latter which may be of interest to investors. Some well known companies trade in pink sheet stocks because they do not meet U.S. exchange requirements including Nintendo, BMW, Heineken, and Volkswagen. These are generally foreign companies that want to have their stocks available to U.S. investors, but do not want to adhere to the regulations and required paperwork to be listed on a U.S. exchange.
how we treat live stock in balancesheet