Understanding The Stock Market
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When an entrepreneur starts a company, he often looks to family and friends for start-up capital. As the company grows, it will need more money, or in other words capital. Those who survive those tough early years, when most businesses fail, will look for a bank loan. Loans carry high cash costs, in the form of interest payments. Eventually, if the company grows enough, its owners may choose to issue stock shares in the public markets. Understanding the stock market is very important to know for these entrepreneurs.
When you hear that a company is "going public", it means that the company is issuing shares of ownership for sale in the public marketplace. This process takes place during the initial public offering, or IPO. The IPO is a first-time offering of stock for sale to the general public. The IPO process involves a number of people in addition to the company owners, and can be a rather complex undertaking. The company itself must be clear in understanding the stock market. To go public and issue an IPO, the company must use and find an Investment Banking firm that is willing to underwrite the public offering. The Investment Banking firm, or underwriter, will do their best to sell the shares. They may reserve the right to sell the offering on an all or none basis, which means that if they cannot find buyers for all the shares to be issued, they may call off the entire offering. The underwriter’s profit in this case is made by a commission charged for selling the stock. If the underwriter agrees to a firm commitment to sell the entire offering, usually the first move is to buy all the shares that are going to be publicly offered at an agreed-upon price. The underwriter then attempts to sell those shares to the public for a higher price, thus profiting from the transaction.
Stock Classifications
There are two classifications of stock: Common and Preferred.
Common stock is usually what is issued to the general public. The term common Stock doesn’t carry any negative connotations, but rather indicates that it is the "standard" stock the company has offered. Common shareholders have voting rights. And as the word suggests, "preferred" stock has certain advantages over common stock. First, preferred shareholders are paid dividends before common shareholders. And if a company isn't doing well, the Common stock dividend is eliminated first. Second, is if a company goes out of business, the owners of preferred shares have prior claim to any assets that remain when the company is dissolved and after bond holders and other creditors have been paid. Owners of common stock are the last in line to pick up the pieces of the fallen corporation.
There are disadvantages to owning preferred shares. Preferred shares have no voting rights. Also, the price of preferred shares tends to rise more slowly that the price of common shares. As owners, common shareholders elect a corporation's Board Of Directors. The board of directors is a group of individuals, which are responsible for managing the affairs and growth of the corporation. The power of the board usually extends beyond that of the founder of the company. The power resides in this board because the board is in the position of representing the shareholders as a group. This board must be educated in understanding the stock market.
Normally, owning one share of common stock gives you the power of one vote. If you have control a large number of shares, you will have more influence on the outcome of elections. At worst, common shareholders can lose their entire investment if their company fails. In such a case, a company may be sold or liquidated and its remaining assets distributed among creditors, such as banks and bondholders. Shareholders would receive proceeds only after theses more senior claims are satisfied. In order to make money, the individual shareholder must sell his shares back to onto the market, through a Stock Exchange and their stock brkers.
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