A share of a corporation's share is?
what is 100 rights certificate for Union Carbide Corp. dated 3-1-86 worth
How can you be a broker in Online Trading?
To become an Online Broker, you must be an expert in the field, acquire special licenses, and have technical knowledge. You must pass the General Securities Registered Representative Examination and the Uniform Securities State Law Examination. Once you are licensed to be a broker, you must establish a site on which people can trade, and then perform and monitor your clients' trades.
becuase something happen already
What are 3 types of illegal business behaviors alleged against Bernie Madoff?
Fraud, theft and deceptive practices.
What does NSE and BSE denote in sharemarket?
Stock exchanges in India: NSE is the National Stock Exchange; BSE is the Bombay Stock Exchange.
Do states tax stock dividends?
When a company issues a stock dividend, rather than cash, there usually are no tax consequences until the shares are sold. These additional shares of stock are usually distributed to shareholders at no cost.
Please see the following site for additional information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dividend
Can a subsidiary own shares in its holding company?
If a subsidiary own shares in holding company that would be considered as treasury.
The Glass-Stegall Act
What is the difference between preference shares and share premium?
Preference shares are paid to shareholders before common stock dividends are paid out. Share premium can not be distributed, however, but under certain circumstances can be reduced.
What are Puttable Financial Instruments?
Those are instruments that give holders the right to put instruments back to the issuer for another financial assets (like cash). Put procedure could be automatic in case of retirement or death of holder, or in case of any uncertain future events.
How can you sell your SBC Communications and Lucent Technologies Inc stocks?
Sell Lucent Technologies and SBC stocks through a broker. For stocks acquired through an employee plan, consult the benefits administrator.
Why company participate in stock exchange?
Companies participate in stock exchanges to raise money from an IPO or initial public offering. An IPO is when they divide a portion of the company up into shares and then sell those shares to a select group of individuals, mostly brokers, underwriters and people who have had some role in issuing the stock. The purpose of going public with a company is to raise capital to reinvest back into the company in hopes that after the IPO demand for the stock of the company will continue to increase thereby bringing the price of the stock up and increasing the return on investments of those who own the company and those who hold the publicly issued stock.
What is dividend signaling theory?
This refers to the idea that the price of a dividend (a corporate payment made by a corporation to its shareholders) signals positive future performance of the company.
Which company is paying out the highest dividend yeld in the FTSE 100?
Please read with caution:
Dividend forecasts are just that, we can not be sure what a company will pay as a dividend. For example, in the Related Link below, Aviva is expected to give the highest dividend yield of 8.1%.
Aviva also has a very good P/E ratio and Price to book ratio. Still it's better to err on the side of caution as profits are reliant on other aspects of the stock markets doing well.
What is option price of stock?
There are many different options for each stock.
Usually a website that gives you a stock quote will give you an option quote also. Then you can see the different available options for that stock.
See related links for more info on Stock Options
Journal entry for Issuing Par Value Common Stock to another company?
[Debit] Cash / bank
[Credit] share capital
Using insider information unavailable to the public when buying or selling stocks is called?
It's called insider trading. It is HIGHLY illegal.
What happens when you sell a put and the stock splits?
It is easier to use an example than it would be to explain. Let's say you are short 1 XYZ June 100 put. In other words, you have given another investor the right to sell you 100 shares of XYZ stock at 100 dollars a share, no matter what price the stock is trading on the open market. If the stock is trading @ 105, no one would "put" the stock to you because they would be losing 5 dollars a share compared to selling at the current price.
Say XYZ stock splits 2 for 1. It goes from 105.00 a share to 52.50 and every share is now worth 2 shares. It would seem that putting the stock to you @ 100 dollars would now be a huge money maker, but it is not. The put also splits 2 for 1. You would then be short 2 June 50 puts, giving someone the right to put 200 shares @ 50 dollars a share into your hands.
The math is fairly simple in a 2 for 1. As you can see, if your put gets exercised against you in either instance, the stock is sold to you for 10,000 dollars total (100 shares @ 100 dollars per, or 200 shares @ 50 dollars per). It gets much more complicated if it is a 3 for 2 or other uneven split. In those instances, an entirely new option class is created and both are traded until all the "old" XYZ options have expired.