No. Whatever you expected is not at all certain: you may expect a decent profit and lose everything, or expect a minor loss and end up making millions.
Dividends.
One share of Nike stock that was bought on August 2, 1999 was worth $ 49.69. Today the same Nike stock would be worth $65.74 as of closing bell today.
28.50/23.94 = 1.19047619 x 100% = 119.047619 therefore, The stock increased by roughly 119%.
25%.
If you bought the stock at 20.25 and sold it for 25.25 you would have made a profit of 5 per share for a total of 150.
A man bought abc stock at 19.65 per share and it sold at 23.25 per share what was his profit on 80 shares before deduction for commissions and taxes the answer is 288.00
Bulova common stock was $5.00 lowes corp. Who bought them out offered $35.00 per share if turned in. My husband failed to do this and i wonder if i can still redeem them?
this is true
Well, Republic airlines bought North Central in 1979, exchanging one share of Republic Stock for one share of North Central. Many years later Northwest Orient Bought Republic airlines for 17 dollars per share
$444
A call option gives the option buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy a certain amount of stock on or before a certain date for a certain price. A put option gives its buyer the right, but not the obligation, to sell stock on or before a certain date for a certain price. How the options are exercised is another difference. If you bought a put, you're hoping the stock price falls below the strike price--the certain price in the contract. It would make no sense to sell stock for $10 a share if it's $15 now, right? Calls exercise when their stock price goes above the strike price.
Market value per share can be defined as the price at which stocks are bought or sold. The market value per share is the current price of the stock.