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One billion shares
A company does not have a definite number of shares of stock. The company can choose to split the number of shares into any ratio with prior announcement.
100
1000
it depends on the company
1500 ÷ 0.02 = 7500
240/3= 80. 80 times 5 is 400.
i have 994 shares of common stock in GE and would like to know many more common stock shares I own above 994
I am answering this question on the assumption that it may fairly be restated as: Given the name of the stock, the total sales price, and the date of sale, how do you determine how many shares were sold? === Ignoring commissions and fees, you can determine the number of shares sold by dividing the total sales price by the price of the stock on the date of sale as follows: # of shares = total sales prices / stock price per share To determine the stock price on the day of sale, you can use any of a variety of resources on the web, for example finance.yahoo.com, where you would enter the ticker symbol in the quotes box, click on 'get quotes', click on 'historical prices', select the appropriate date range, and read the price. I believe you will be OK if you use the average of the high and low for the day, but you should be careful if the stock was particularly volatile that day. For a truly correct calculation you need to add the commission and fees back to the sales price to get the 'gross sales price' and use that in the calculation. (If you have a statement identifying the sales price as 'gross' then you are already set.)
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This would obviously depend on the popularity of the stock in question. Most of the stocks are in the hundred thousands, if not millions of shares on a daily basis.
16 million shares were dumped