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Issued shares(I) are shares of stock that have been sold to investors. It includes both outstanding shares(O) and Treasury shares(T). Thus, I = O+T Outstanding shares(O) are shares of stock currently owned by the shareholders.
It's supposed to--the fewer shares outstanding, the more they're worth. But it's possible the shares could also go down in price.
Issued Shares Authorized Shares = Issued Shares (sold to investors) + Unissued Shares Issued Shares = Outstanding Stock (held by investors) + Treasury Stock (stock bought back by company)
A 10% dividend not make any difference whatsoever to the number of issued shares. Neither will it effect the book value of its shares.
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- By generating GAAP earnings and not paying them as dividends - the retained earnings will increase. - By selling and increasing outstanding number of shares - the paid in capital will increase.
Issued shares(I) are shares of stock that have been sold to investors. It includes both outstanding shares(O) and Treasury shares(T). Thus, I = O+T Outstanding shares(O) are shares of stock currently owned by the shareholders.
It's supposed to--the fewer shares outstanding, the more they're worth. But it's possible the shares could also go down in price.
Currently the company has 5,052,338,040 shares outstanding and 10,000,000,000 authorized.
Outstanding capital refers to the number of shares that remain with the stockholders. This is the result of issued shared minus treasury shares and the dividends are paid based on these shares.
Issued Shares Authorized Shares = Issued Shares (sold to investors) + Unissued Shares Issued Shares = Outstanding Stock (held by investors) + Treasury Stock (stock bought back by company)
A 10% dividend not make any difference whatsoever to the number of issued shares. Neither will it effect the book value of its shares.
Number of shares held by investors for a company. For instance, if a company goes public and issues 100,000 shares, then the number of shares outstanding is 100,000. This number can be found on the balance sheet of a company!
A 'share buy back' is the main option in which a company can reduce the amount of outstanding shares. A company will purchase shares on the open market or work out a deal to buy shares from individual holders, and then retire the shares.
check a shares website it could tell you company profits, shares and debts!
my account textbook states that it does, although i am unsure about the reasoning for it (and am currently searching for it) -3rd year honours commerce student