Share (finance)


Securities

Securities
Bond
Stock
Investment fund
Derivative
Structured finance
Agency security

Markets
Bond market
Stock market
Futures market
Foreign exchange market
Commodity market
Spot market
Over-the-counter market (OTC)

Bonds by coupon
Fixed rate bond
Floating rate note
Zero-coupon bond
Inflation-indexed bond
Commercial paper
Perpetual bond

Bonds by issuer
Corporate bond
Government bond
Municipal bond
Pfandbrief
Sovereign bond

Equities (stocks)
Stock
Share
Initial public offering (IPO)
Short selling

Investment funds
Mutual fund
Index fund
Exchange-traded fund (ETF)
Closed-end fund
Segregated fund
Hedge fund

Structured finance
Securitization
Asset-backed security
Mortgage-backed security
Commercial mortgage-backed security
Residential mortgage-backed security

Tranche
Collateralized debt obligation
Collateralized fund obligation
Collateralized mortgage obligation

Credit-linked note
Unsecured debt
Agency security

Derivatives
Option
Warrant
Futures
Forward contract
Swap
Credit derivative
Hybrid security

A joint stock company divides its capital into units of equal denomination. Each unit is called a share. These units are offered for sale to raise capital. This is termed as issuing shares. A person who buys share/shares of the company is called a shareholder, and by acquiring share or shares in the company becomes one of the owners of the company. Thus, a share is an indivisible unit of capital. It expresses the proprietary relationship between the company and the shareholder. The denominated value of a share is its face value: the total capital of a company is divided into number of shares.[1]

In financial markets, a share is a unit of account for various financial instruments including stocks (ordinary or preferential), and investments in limited partnerships, and real estate investment trusts. The common feature of all these is equity participation (limited in the case of preference shares).

Contents

Shareholders and dividends

The income received from shares is called a dividend, and a person owning his shares is called a shareholder.

Valuation

Shares are valued according to various principles in different markets, but a basic premise is that a share is worth the price at which a transaction would be likely to occur were the shares to be sold. The liquidity of markets is a major consideration as to whether a share is able to be sold at any given time. An actual sale transaction of shares between buyer and seller is usually considered to provide the best prima-facie market indicator as to the "true value" of shares at that particular time.

Tax treatment

Tax treatment of dividends varies between territories. For instance, in India, dividends are tax free in the hands of the shareholder, but the company paying the dividend has to pay dividend distribution tax at 12.5%. There is also the concept of a deemed dividend, which is not tax free. Further, Indian tax laws include provisions to stop dividend stripping.

Share certificates

Investors were given share certificates as evidence of their ownership of shares but certificates are not always issued nowadays. Instead, the ownership may be recorded electronically by a system such as CREST.

Gallery

See also

References