Not necessarily. If you are the company whose name is on the stock and you are selling shares of stock that were just created, that would be issuance. If you are a market maker, an individual investor or a company who sells stock they bought from an investor, that would be sales.
Yes, it is possible for you to buy the same stock after selling it.
The process of selling and then buying back the same stock is called a "round trip trade."
Yes, it is possible to profit from both selling and buying the same stock through a trading strategy called "buying low and selling high." This involves purchasing the stock at a lower price and then selling it at a higher price to make a profit.
One or more of the following market conditions may explain why a bond is selling at a premium (to face value): * Interest rates went down (causing value to go up) * The credit rating for the company issuing the stock went up * The company issuing the bonds has offered to buy outstanding debt at a premium * If convertible bond (to stock), the underlying stock went above a critical value making the bond more valuable when converted
Underpricing is one major expense associated with issuing new shares of common stock.
In addition to issuing bonds, corporations may borrow directly from any loan source, such as banks. On occasion, corporations raise needed cash by authorizing and selling additional stock.
Yes, it is possible for you to buy the same stock after selling it.
selling stock,issuing bonds investment
The process of selling and then buying back the same stock is called a "round trip trade."
Yes, it is possible to profit from both selling and buying the same stock through a trading strategy called "buying low and selling high." This involves purchasing the stock at a lower price and then selling it at a higher price to make a profit.
No. When securities are traded the issuing corporation receives nothing. The broker enabling the trade receives a fee. That is it. The issuing corporation only gets its money when it issues its stock at the initial offering.
Watered stock is stock that is issued with a price that is much higher than the issuing company's assets. Watered stock can be stock that is overvalued due to excessive issuing or inflated accounting values.
One or more of the following market conditions may explain why a bond is selling at a premium (to face value): * Interest rates went down (causing value to go up) * The credit rating for the company issuing the stock went up * The company issuing the bonds has offered to buy outstanding debt at a premium * If convertible bond (to stock), the underlying stock went above a critical value making the bond more valuable when converted
Underpricing is one major expense associated with issuing new shares of common stock.
by selling bonds and issuing stocks...
by selling bonds and issuing stocks...
A business that raises money by issuing shares of stock?