corporation
Corporation
Corporation
shareholders
A company is a business structure which has legal status as an entity in its own right. A group of people called directors are responsible for running the company. One or more of these might be a managing director. To a lesser extent, the shareholders are also in charge of a company - it is their invested funds which allow the company to function and they have an interest in how the company is run because the company needs to succeed for them to see a return on their investment.
They become part of the ownership group.
Most likely, they would be shareholders.
Corporation
Shareholders.
shareholders
Shareholders
Volkswagen Group, which is a publicly traded company, and is thus owned by its shareholders.
The simplest thing shareholders can do is sell their shares. This is called voting with your feet or voting with your money. Shareholders can also petition to have items placed on the annual shareholder ballot. Shareholders can group together to vote out ineffective board members, though there are limits on how they can cooperate.
Shareholders. Apex :)
Jeep is a division of Chrysler Group LLC. Chrysler Group LLC is owned by it's shareholders.
A company is a business structure which has legal status as an entity in its own right. A group of people called directors are responsible for running the company. One or more of these might be a managing director. To a lesser extent, the shareholders are also in charge of a company - it is their invested funds which allow the company to function and they have an interest in how the company is run because the company needs to succeed for them to see a return on their investment.
They become part of the ownership group.
Not sure about a pop group, but there was a rock group called Bad Company.
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.