7.1
The Simple Definition: What a Stock Represents
A stock — also called a share or equity — is a unit of ownership in a publicly listed company. When a company decides to raise capital from the public, it divides its total ownership into millions or billions of equal units and offers them for sale. Each unit is a share. When you buy shares, you become a partial owner of the business — proportional to the number of shares you hold relative to the total outstanding.
The price of each share reflects the market’s current valuation of that fractional ownership. If a company has 1 billion shares outstanding and the stock trades at $150 per share, the market is saying the entire company is worth $150 billion — its market capitalization. That $150 price is not fixed by the company. It is determined continuously by the supply and demand of buyers and sellers trading those shares on the exchange.
Companies issue stock primarily to raise capital without taking on debt. In exchange for the capital, investors receive ownership rights — including a proportional claim on future profits, potential voting rights, and a residual claim on assets if the company is ever dissolved. For traders, these rights are secondary to one thing: the movement of the share price.
Core Concept: You do not need to exercise voting rights or wait for dividends to profit from a stock. As a trader, you profit from buying at one price and selling at a higher one — or shorting at a high price and covering at a lower one.
7.2
What Do You Actually Own When You Buy a Stock?
Most beginners think of stock ownership abstractly — they own ‘a piece of the company.’ That is true in a legal sense, but the practical rights attached to that ownership are more specific and more limited than the phrase implies. Understanding exactly what you hold matters — especially in edge-case scenarios like company bankruptcies, hostile takeovers, and corporate restructurings.
When you buy common stock in a company, you receive a bundle of rights that includes — but is not limited to — the following:
- Economic interest: A proportional claim on the company’s residual profits, typically paid as dividends when declared.
- Voting rights: The ability to vote on major corporate decisions at annual shareholder meetings.
- Transferability: The right to sell your shares to any willing buyer at market price at any time during trading hours.
- Residual claim: A last-in-line claim on the company’s assets if it liquidates after all debts and preferred shareholders are paid.
Voting Rights and Shareholder Meetings
Every share of standard common stock carries one vote in corporate decisions. These votes are exercised at annual general meetings (AGMs) — where shareholders vote on board members, executive compensation, mergers, and other material corporate actions. The number of votes you hold equals the number of shares you own.
In practice, individual retail traders holding a few hundred shares have negligible voting influence on large companies. What matters to traders is that voting rights determine who controls a company — and shifts in corporate control are major price catalysts. A hostile takeover bid, an activist investor campaign, or a proxy fight between rival management teams can move a stock 20–40% in days.
Some companies issue dual-class shares — Class A with standard voting rights and Class B with enhanced voting power (sometimes 10 votes per share). Alphabet, Meta, and Berkshire Hathaway all use dual-class structures. Founders and insiders retain control through Class B shares even as they sell Class A shares to the public. For traders, this means management entrenchment is greater — hostile takeovers are effectively impossible, and management decisions are harder to challenge.
Claim on Assets in a Liquidation
In a company bankruptcy and liquidation, common shareholders are last in line. Before common shareholders receive anything, the company must fully repay secured creditors (banks, bondholders), then unsecured creditors, then preferred shareholders. In the vast majority of corporate bankruptcies, common shareholders receive nothing. The shares go to zero.
This is not a theoretical risk. When a retailer, airline, or energy company files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, trading in its common stock often continues — sometimes with significant volatility — even as the shares are heading toward worthlessness. Retail traders who buy into a bankruptcy story hoping for a recovery are frequently wiped out. The residual claim of common shareholders in liquidation is legally valid but practically worthless in most bankruptcy outcomes.
Risk Warning: If a company announces bankruptcy filing, its common shares are almost certainly heading to zero. Do not trade bankrupt companies unless you fully understand the reorganization process. The volatility is not opportunity — it is noise ahead of an inevitable outcome.
7.3
Common Stock vs Preferred Stock: Key Differences
Not all stock is the same. The two primary categories — common and preferred — have fundamentally different characteristics, different investor profiles, and different roles in a trading strategy. Most retail traders exclusively trade common stock. Understanding why requires knowing what preferred stock actually is.
| Attribute | 📈 Common Stock | 🏦 Preferred Stock |
|---|---|---|
| Market access | Traded on major exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ) | Traded OTC or on exchanges — less liquid |
| Price volatility | High — moves with earnings and sentiment | Low — anchored to fixed dividend value |
| Voting rights | Yes — one vote per share typically | Usually none |
| Dividend | Variable — declared by board, can be cut | Fixed — contractually defined rate |
| Dividend priority | Paid after preferred shareholders | Paid before common shareholders |
| Bankruptcy claim | Last in line — often recovers nothing | Before common, after bondholders |
| Upside potential | Unlimited — rises with company growth | Limited — capped near par value |
| Best for traders | Yes — primary trading instrument | No — designed for income investors |
Common Stock: Upside, Voting, and Volatility
Common stock is the standard equity instrument traded on every major exchange. It offers unlimited upside — if the company grows from a $5 billion to a $500 billion business, common shareholders participate in the full appreciation. It also carries full downside exposure — if the company fails, common shareholders lose their entire investment.
The high volatility of common stock is a feature for traders, not a flaw. Price moves driven by earnings beats, product launches, analyst upgrades, or sector rotation create the intraday and swing trading opportunities that traders seek. A stock moving 5–15% in a single session on high volume is the environment active traders are built to exploit.
Common stock is also what creates the float dynamics discussed later in this article. Because common shares are freely transferable and subject to speculative trading, their price incorporates not just fundamental value but also momentum, sentiment, and positioning — all factors that technical analysis is designed to measure.
Preferred Stock: Fixed Dividends and Priority Claims
Preferred stock is a hybrid instrument — part equity, part debt-like. It pays a fixed dividend (typically quarterly), does not carry voting rights in most cases, and holds a senior claim to assets ahead of common shareholders in a liquidation. The price of preferred stock is anchored to its dividend yield, not to the company’s growth prospects.
Preferred shares trade far less actively than common shares. Their price moves slowly, their daily ranges are narrow, and their liquidity is generally poor compared to the same company’s common stock. They are designed for institutional income investors — pension funds, insurance companies — that need predictable cash flows, not capital appreciation.
Which Type Should Traders Focus On?
Common stock — exclusively. Preferred stock has the narrow price range, low liquidity, and income-investor profile of a bond, not an equity. Every setup in technical analysis, every momentum play, every earnings trade, and every breakout strategy is applied to common stock. When a ticker symbol appears on a trading platform without a suffix, it is common stock by default.
Ticker Notation: Preferred stock tickers typically carry a suffix — BRK.A and BRK.B are Berkshire Hathaway’s two share classes. If you see a suffix like -P, -PA, or =P, it usually indicates a preferred share series. Always verify before trading.
7.4
How Shares Are Created and Issued
The number of shares available to trade is not arbitrary — it is a defined, documented structure that directly affects how a stock behaves. Three specific numbers matter: authorized shares, issued shares, and the float. Most beginner resources define these terms but do not explain why they matter for trading. They do.
Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Shares
| Term | Definition | Trader Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Authorized Shares | Maximum number of shares the company is permitted to issue under its corporate charter | Sets the ceiling for dilution — important for growth companies issuing shares for acquisitions |
| Issued Shares | Total shares that have been issued to investors, including treasury shares | Basis for market cap calculation |
| Outstanding Shares | Issued shares minus treasury shares (shares held by the company itself) | The number used to calculate EPS and market capitalization |
| Treasury Shares | Shares bought back by the company — not available for trading | Buybacks reduce outstanding shares, mechanically increasing EPS |
| Float | Outstanding shares minus restricted shares held by insiders and institutions with lock-up periods | The shares actually available for public trading — the most important number for traders |
Float: The Shares That Actually Trade
Float is the single most important share structure metric for active traders. It represents the number of shares freely available for buying and selling in the open market — excluding shares held by company insiders, major institutions with lock-up agreements, and the company’s own treasury. Float determines how easily price can move.
[Image comparing total outstanding shares vs float shares]
Float categories: the smaller the float, the more violently price can move on the same volume
A low-float stock (under 20 million shares) can move 20–50% on a single catalyst because even moderate buying volume overwhelms the available supply. When 500,000 shares of a 5-million-share float stock are traded in one hour, that represents 10% of the entire supply changing hands — enough to dramatically reprice the stock. This is why low-float stocks are both the highest-opportunity and highest-risk instruments in active trading.
| Float Category | Share Count | Volatility Profile | Spread | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low float | Under 20M | Extreme — 20–50%+ daily moves possible | Wide | Experienced momentum traders only |
| Mid float | 20M – 200M | Elevated — 5–15% daily moves common | Moderate | Intermediate traders |
| High float | 200M – 1B | Moderate — 2–8% daily range typical | Tight | All trader levels |
| Mega float | Above 1B | Low — 1–3% daily range typical | Tight | Beginners — best execution, least risk |
Beginner Rule: Start with high-float and mega-float stocks. Their predictable, controlled price behavior gives you time to analyze and execute without every candle being a crisis. Low-float stocks are advanced instruments — approach them only after developing consistent execution skills.
7.5
How Stock Dividends Work
A dividend is a cash payment made by a company to its shareholders, funded from retained earnings. Not all stocks pay dividends. Technology growth companies typically reinvest all profits back into the business — their shareholders profit through price appreciation, not income. Mature, stable companies — utilities, consumer staples, financials — often pay regular quarterly dividends as a core part of their investor value proposition.
For active traders holding positions for days to weeks, dividends are mostly irrelevant — the payment is too small and too infrequent to materially affect a trading position. One date does matter: the ex-dividend date.
| Dividend Date | Definition | What Traders Need to Know |
|---|---|---|
| Declaration Date | Board announces the dividend amount and schedule | Note the upcoming dates — factor into trade planning |
| Ex-Dividend Date | Cut-off date — only holders from the prior day receive the dividend | Stock price drops by approximately the dividend amount at open |
| Record Date | Company confirms the shareholder list for payment | One business day after ex-dividend date |
| Payment Date | Dividend is deposited into shareholders’ accounts | Typically 2–4 weeks after record date |
[Image of a dividend timeline showing declaration date, ex-dividend date, record date, and payment date]
The ex-dividend date creates a predictable price drop. On the morning of the ex-dividend date, the stock opens lower by approximately the dividend amount — this is a mechanical adjustment, not a fundamental change in the company. Traders holding open positions through this date need to account for the gap down in their stop-loss placement to avoid a premature exit from a valid trade.
7.6
Why Stocks Go Up and Down in Value
A stock’s price changes whenever the market’s collective assessment of the company’s value changes. That reassessment is triggered continuously by new information — earnings reports, economic data, management changes, competitor actions, and shifts in investor sentiment.
For traders, the cause of the move matters less than the move itself — but understanding drivers helps you anticipate them. The key price drivers for individual stocks are: quarterly earnings versus analyst expectations, management guidance for the next quarter or year, changes in the company’s competitive position, sector-wide repricing driven by macro events, and changes in the supply of shares through buybacks or new issuances.
The market is also forward-looking. A stock does not rise when the company reports good results — it rises when the results are better than what the market had already priced in. This is why stocks sometimes fall on good news (the good news was already priced in) and rise on bad news (the bad news was worse than feared but better than worst-case). Mastering this expectation-versus-reality dynamic is one of the most important conceptual leaps in trading development.
| Driver | Direction | Magnitude | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Earnings beat + raised guidance | Up | Large — 8–20%+ | Company beats EPS by 15%, raises full-year guidance |
| Earnings miss + lowered guidance | Down | Large — 10–30%+ | Company misses revenue, cuts next-quarter forecast |
| Stock buyback announcement | Up | Moderate — 3–8% | Board approves $5B buyback program |
| Secondary share offering | Down | Moderate — 5–15% | Company issues 10M new shares to fund acquisition |
| Analyst upgrade / price target raise | Up | Small — 2–5% | Goldman raises rating to Buy, target to $250 |
| Sector contagion from peer’s bad results | Down | Small–Moderate | Competitor misses earnings — entire sector reprices |
| Macro event (rate decision, GDP data) | Varies | Varies widely | Fed raises rates unexpectedly — growth stocks sell off |
7.7
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a stock and a share?
The terms are used interchangeably in practice. Technically, ‘stock’ refers to equity ownership in a company in general, while ‘shares’ refers to the specific units of that stock. Saying ‘I own stock in Apple’ and ‘I own 100 shares of Apple’ are both correct — the second is more precise. In trading contexts, ‘shares’ is the more common term when referring to a specific quantity.
Can a stock’s price go below zero?
No. A stock price cannot fall below zero. The minimum value of a share is zero — representing a company with no residual value after all obligations are met. In practice, most stocks are delisted from major exchanges before reaching zero, typically when the share price falls below $1.00 and stays there. Once delisted, shares may trade on OTC (over-the-counter) markets at fractions of a cent.
Do I need to own a full share to trade a stock?
No. Most major retail brokers now offer fractional shares — the ability to buy a portion of a share. If Apple is trading at $190 and you have $50 to invest, you can buy 0.263 shares. Fractional shares have the same price exposure as full shares proportionally — a 5% move in Apple’s price moves your $50 position by $2.50. This makes high-priced stocks accessible to traders with smaller accounts.
What happens to my shares if a company is acquired?
In a cash acquisition, your shares are purchased at the deal price — typically at a premium to the current market price — and your position closes automatically at settlement. You receive cash. In a stock-for-stock merger, your shares are exchanged for shares of the acquiring company at an agreed ratio. In both cases, the transaction is compulsory once the deal is approved by shareholders and regulators — you cannot opt out of a completed merger.
7.8
Quiz
Continue Your Learning
➜ Now you know what a stock is — learn about the markets: Bull Market vs Bear Market: What Every Beginner Must Know.