What is ” STOCK ” ?
1.A share of a company held by an individual or group. Corporations raise capital by issuing stocks and entitle the stock owners (shareholders) to partial ownership of the corporation. Stocks are bought and sold on what is called an exchange. There are several types of stocks and the two most typical forms are preferred stock and common stock.
2.British term for (1) A fixed interest government debt security issued usually in denominations, and (2) Inventory.
Use stock in a sentence
- When the company was just forming, Joe bought most of the stock and when the company became large, he sold his stock and became rich.
I am happy that I bought stock in a company when I was younger, because it became very valuable 20 years later.
The board of directors decided to use a secondary stock offering to raise additional capital to pay for expansion in China.
Notable Quotes
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The Only Time a Company Should Repurchase its Shares“There is only one combination of facts that makes it advisable for a company to repurchase its shares: First, the company has available funds — cash plus sensible borrowing capacity — beyond the near-term needs of the business and, second, finds its stock selling in the market below its intrinsic value, conservatively-calculated. To this we add a caveat: Shareholders should have been supplied all the information they need for estimating that value. Otherwise, insiders could take advantage of their uninformed partners and buy out their interests at a fraction of true worth.”
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Owning Options Compared to Owning Stocks“Ironically, the rhetoric about options frequently describes them as desirable because they put managers and owners in the same financial boat. In reality, the boats are far different. No owner has ever escaped the burden of capital costs, whereas a holder of a fixed-price option bears no capital costs at all. An owner must weigh upside potential against downside risk; an option holder has no downside. In fact, the business project in which you would wish to have an option frequently is a project in which you would reject ownership. (I’ll be happy to accept a lottery ticket as a gift — but I’ll never buy one.)”
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Approaching Stocks After a Huge Crash“Nobody who has ever been on a falling elevator and survived ever approaches such a conveyance without a fundamentally reduced degree of confidence. (Stated by Robert Reno after the 1987 stock market crash)”
Source….. http://www.businessdictionary.com
Natarajan