(in the US) Not enough information is disclosed in the question. It depends on what kind of corporation it is, and how it is registered with the state.
Stocks
No, it's a private company selling TV service, it has shareholders and stock.
Selling stock gives the shareholders some controll over the company
By selling the company into 'shares' of the company. Shares being a piece of the company whereby 'shareholders' can receive dividends of the profits.
The H J Heinz Company's parent organization is Kraft Heinz, and its shareholders include a range of institutional investors and individual shareholders. The largest shareholders typically include pension funds, hedge funds, mutual funds, and other investment firms. The specific list of shareholders can change over time due to buying and selling of shares in the company.
Selling stock gives the shareholders some control over the company.
Selling stock gives the shareholders some control over the company.
Selling stock gives the shareholders some control over the company.
Share dilution happens when a company issues additional stock. Therefore, shareholders' ownership in the company is reduced, or diluted when these new shares are issued. Assume a small business has 10 shareholders and that each shareholder owns one share, or 10%, of the company
if a company files for bankruptcy and you as a shear holder found out about it in time the best think is to sell b4 other shareholders also find out and they also start selling . if evry one start selling at the same time then it brings the share price to a turmoil. this means if its .20 cents now most likely it would be .05 cents tomoro
A corporation is owned by its shareholders. A number of people (shareholders) can invest their money into a corporation and own shares in that company. In a parent company, a company such as the one above starts up another corporation (subsidiary corporation), and the original (parent) company itself owns the shares of the subsidiary. The individual shareholders of the parent own the subsidiary, but indirectly. They are not, themselves, shareholders in the subsidiay -- the parent owns the shares. One of the reasons for this is to "limit" the liability of shareholders. If the parent owns several subsidiares, and one of them gets into financial difficulty, it can be closed down (or sold) without upsetting the operations of the other subsidiaries. Selling one operation as a subsidiary is also easier because it is financially "self-contained." Similarly, if a person or a group of people owns several corporations, they can form a "holding" company, and transfer their shares of each companyinto it, rather than holding them personally. The individuals then become shareholders in the holding (parent) company, and the parent company owns the shares in each of the original companies, which then are subsidiaries of the parent. Indiviuals own shares in parent.> Parent owns shares in each subsidiary.
This strictly company information. But the cost is the selling cost minus 10 percent of the real cost.