Ordinary Shares

Ordinary Shares

Ordinary shares, also called common shares, are stocks sold on a public exchange. If a company makes a large profit, the creditors and preferred shareholders do not receive more than the fixed amounts to which they are entitled, while ordinary shareholders may divide the windfall among themselves. In addition to the right to residual profits, shareholders are entitled to vote for the company's board members and to receive and approve the company's annual financial statements. Unlike in the case of preferred shares, the owner of ordinary shares is not guaranteed a dividend. In other words, they are entitled to receive dividends if any are available after the company pays dividends on preferred shares.

Ordinary shares of stock represent proportional ownership of a company.

What Are Ordinary Shares?

Ordinary shares, also called common shares, are stocks sold on a public exchange. Each share of stock generally gives its owner the right to one vote at a company shareholders' meeting. Unlike in the case of preferred shares, the owner of ordinary shares is not guaranteed a dividend.

The vast majority of shares sold on all of the U.S. stock exchanges are ordinary shares.

Ordinary shares of stock represent proportional ownership of a company.
These shares come with voting rights equaling one vote per share.
Owners of ordinary shares may or may not receive dividends based on a company’s performance.
Preferred shares come with guaranteed dividends at a set percentage.

Understanding Ordinary Shares

An ordinary share represents a fraction of ownership in the corporation that issues it. As an owner, the shareholder gets a vote in the company's major decisions, decided at its shareholder meetings.

The shareholder may or may not receive a dividend. The company's board of directors decides whether a dividend will be awarded, and how much it will be. The dividend represents the stock owner's share of the profits of the corporation over the past quarter or year.

A corporation may also issue preferred shares. These are a kind of hybrid of a stock and a bond. Their owners are guaranteed a set dividend payment. The price of the shares may rise or fall but is not as volatile as the common stock price. Investors in preferred shares are motivated primarily by the steady income from dividends.

The Rights of Ordinary Shareholders

Ordinary shareholders have the right to a corporation's residual profits. In other words, they are entitled to receive dividends if any are available after the company pays dividends on preferred shares.

This is effectively meaningless. The company's directors may well decide to plow all of its spare cash back into the business, in which case no residual profits will be available for dividends.

Ordinary shareholders also are entitled to a share of the residual economic value of the company if the business collapses. However, they are last in line in bankruptcy court after bondholders and preferred shareholders. As such, ordinary shareholders are on the same footing as unsecured creditors.

The Advantages of Ordinary Shareholders

Ordinary shareholders take on greater financial risk than preferred shareholders of a corporation, but they also may reap greater rewards. If a company makes a large profit, the creditors and preferred shareholders do not receive more than the fixed amounts to which they are entitled, while ordinary shareholders may divide the windfall among themselves.

The same occurs when companies such as start-ups are sold to larger corporations. Ordinary shareholders usually profit the most.

In addition to the right to residual profits, shareholders are entitled to vote for the company's board members and to receive and approve the company's annual financial statements. (Some preferred shareholders also receive voting rights.)

The Value of Ordinary Shares

In many jurisdictions, ordinary shares have a stated "par value" or face value, but this is a technicality and is often set at a few pennies per share. Market forces, the value of the underlying business, and investor sentiment determine the market price that investors pay for ordinary shares.

A famous example is Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A), whose Class A common shares have a par value of $5 but trade above $325,000 per share as of early September 2020.

Related terms:

Cashless Conversion

Cashless conversion is the direct conversion of ownership (from one ownership type to another) of an underlying asset without any initial cash outlay. read more

Common Shareholder

A common shareholder owns part of a company via share ownership and has voting rights and the right to receive declared common dividends. read more

Economic Value

Economic value is the worth of a good or service determined by people's preferences and the trade-offs they choose given their scarce resources. read more

Preferred Stock

Preferred stock refers to a class of ownership that has a higher claim on assets and earnings than common stock has. read more

Shareholder

A shareholder is any person, company, or institution that owns at least one share in a company. read more

Shares

Shares are a unit of ownership of a company that may be purchased by an investor. read more

Voting Shares

When stockholders have the right to vote on matters of corporate policy making, they are said to own voting shares. read more