Typically, a person who owns stocks is referred to as a Stock Holder, or even Share Holder. They can also be referred to as an Investor, but that title is not necessarily limited to owning stocks.
Stock holder.
Stock Holder
a shareholder (?)
If they own all the shares of stock then yes they can. You would be 100% owner since you would have all the stock. However, it wouldn't mean you would be completely in charge since there must be a board of directors, CEO, and President.
Almost half, 47%, of US citizens own a stock in the stock market. 53% have no money invested in stocks.
The people who buy stock and own the company.
a Stock Broker
When a stock splits, one stock becomes two. People that own the stock can see the value of their stock for the company double.
They own a share of a company.
Dividends don't play into call options. If you sell a covered call and it expires worthless, you'll receive any dividends from the stock because you still own the stock. If it's exercised, the new owner receives them because the stock is hers now. The money that changes hands when you sell a call is the "premium," and the person who sells the call gets that.
Seller
A covered call means that you own the underlying stock on the option you are selling. Say you own 100 shares of apple computer. You sell ONE call option which allows the buyer of the option to purchase the underlying 1oo shares of stock at the strike price. If the contract matures, you can then deliver the stock to the option buyer.
Two thirds of stock.
They're called stock brokers.
a joint-stock colony
A columnist...?
A narcissist.
patrioctic.
Slave owner
Poor!