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norbertk62
10 months ago

The company has brought a certain number of its shareholdings into the stock exchange trade and thus received revenue – which remain to the company.

If you buy a share on the stock exchange, then you buy it from someone who has a share – the company doesn’t care.

If now someone works with empty sales (or leverage or ..) in stock exchange trading, then this is only interested in the buyers / sellers on the stock market, the company is out.

norbertk62
10 months ago
Reply to  DoubleBuckel

Quite simply: you sell a certain number of shares in your business and get money for it – not a loan, but bares. However, if you keep more than 50% of your company’s shares, others can agree to the maximum. This is collecting money without paying interest (Dividers are of course different to see). If the company grows, you will return to shares and get money again (No – it’s not that simple).

iq1000
10 months ago

No. It’s a normal sale. You don’t find any shares out of nowhere (that’s what options are) but you borrow shares.

kreuzundquerxxx
10 months ago

only if a public limited company makes an investment and issues new shares, then the public limited company receives money. The stock trading on the stock exchanges is only detrimental to the one that has to sell its shares.

DerHans
10 months ago

The real company has nothing to do with the stock exchange. If the price value of a company falls, the investments are not torn off, the exchange rate is nothing but a WETTE as this paper develops in the future.

This has nothing to do with the real business world.