Why can unissued capital stock exist?












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Unissued capital stock allows a company to issue shares at any given time, diluting the ownership of current shareholders. This does not seem logical nor fair. At any given time, shouldn't 100% of the company be owned by the shareholders? Because by nature of unissued capital stock, not 100% of a company is owned at a given time (unless all unissued capital stock are issued).










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    11














    Unissued capital stock allows a company to issue shares at any given time, diluting the ownership of current shareholders. This does not seem logical nor fair. At any given time, shouldn't 100% of the company be owned by the shareholders? Because by nature of unissued capital stock, not 100% of a company is owned at a given time (unless all unissued capital stock are issued).










    share|improve this question



























      11












      11








      11







      Unissued capital stock allows a company to issue shares at any given time, diluting the ownership of current shareholders. This does not seem logical nor fair. At any given time, shouldn't 100% of the company be owned by the shareholders? Because by nature of unissued capital stock, not 100% of a company is owned at a given time (unless all unissued capital stock are issued).










      share|improve this question















      Unissued capital stock allows a company to issue shares at any given time, diluting the ownership of current shareholders. This does not seem logical nor fair. At any given time, shouldn't 100% of the company be owned by the shareholders? Because by nature of unissued capital stock, not 100% of a company is owned at a given time (unless all unissued capital stock are issued).







      stocks financial-literacy stock-valuation






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      edited 2 days ago









      Dheer

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      Novel Ventures

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          It's not really true to say that having unissued stock means that the company is not 100% owned. It'd be more accurate to say that the unissued shares are assets of the company (and therefore, indirectly, of the current shareholders). The company can issue the stock to others in exchange for something that increases the value of the company by a comparable amount (e.g. cash or work). This makes it a fair trade which should not decrease the value of existing shareholders' stock.



          For example, suppose company X has 10 issued shares of stock and a total of 20 authorized shares, (leaving 10 unissued). The valuation of the company is $10, meaning each owned share is worth $1. Now someone comes and gives the company $1 for a new share of stock. Now the company has an extra dollar it didn't have before so it's now worth $11. There are also now 11 issued shares of stock, so each one is still worth a dollar. The original shareholders have been "diluted" in that they now own a smaller percentage of the company, but due to the increase in the company's value, they're just as well-off as they were before. Company X can do this 9 more times before it's out of authorized shares and needs to ask the shareholders for permission to increase the number.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
            – Daniel
            2 days ago










          • Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago










          • @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
            – David Schwartz
            20 hours ago











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          It's not really true to say that having unissued stock means that the company is not 100% owned. It'd be more accurate to say that the unissued shares are assets of the company (and therefore, indirectly, of the current shareholders). The company can issue the stock to others in exchange for something that increases the value of the company by a comparable amount (e.g. cash or work). This makes it a fair trade which should not decrease the value of existing shareholders' stock.



          For example, suppose company X has 10 issued shares of stock and a total of 20 authorized shares, (leaving 10 unissued). The valuation of the company is $10, meaning each owned share is worth $1. Now someone comes and gives the company $1 for a new share of stock. Now the company has an extra dollar it didn't have before so it's now worth $11. There are also now 11 issued shares of stock, so each one is still worth a dollar. The original shareholders have been "diluted" in that they now own a smaller percentage of the company, but due to the increase in the company's value, they're just as well-off as they were before. Company X can do this 9 more times before it's out of authorized shares and needs to ask the shareholders for permission to increase the number.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
            – Daniel
            2 days ago










          • Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago










          • @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
            – David Schwartz
            20 hours ago
















          14














          It's not really true to say that having unissued stock means that the company is not 100% owned. It'd be more accurate to say that the unissued shares are assets of the company (and therefore, indirectly, of the current shareholders). The company can issue the stock to others in exchange for something that increases the value of the company by a comparable amount (e.g. cash or work). This makes it a fair trade which should not decrease the value of existing shareholders' stock.



          For example, suppose company X has 10 issued shares of stock and a total of 20 authorized shares, (leaving 10 unissued). The valuation of the company is $10, meaning each owned share is worth $1. Now someone comes and gives the company $1 for a new share of stock. Now the company has an extra dollar it didn't have before so it's now worth $11. There are also now 11 issued shares of stock, so each one is still worth a dollar. The original shareholders have been "diluted" in that they now own a smaller percentage of the company, but due to the increase in the company's value, they're just as well-off as they were before. Company X can do this 9 more times before it's out of authorized shares and needs to ask the shareholders for permission to increase the number.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
            – Daniel
            2 days ago










          • Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago










          • @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
            – David Schwartz
            20 hours ago














          14












          14








          14






          It's not really true to say that having unissued stock means that the company is not 100% owned. It'd be more accurate to say that the unissued shares are assets of the company (and therefore, indirectly, of the current shareholders). The company can issue the stock to others in exchange for something that increases the value of the company by a comparable amount (e.g. cash or work). This makes it a fair trade which should not decrease the value of existing shareholders' stock.



          For example, suppose company X has 10 issued shares of stock and a total of 20 authorized shares, (leaving 10 unissued). The valuation of the company is $10, meaning each owned share is worth $1. Now someone comes and gives the company $1 for a new share of stock. Now the company has an extra dollar it didn't have before so it's now worth $11. There are also now 11 issued shares of stock, so each one is still worth a dollar. The original shareholders have been "diluted" in that they now own a smaller percentage of the company, but due to the increase in the company's value, they're just as well-off as they were before. Company X can do this 9 more times before it's out of authorized shares and needs to ask the shareholders for permission to increase the number.






          share|improve this answer














          It's not really true to say that having unissued stock means that the company is not 100% owned. It'd be more accurate to say that the unissued shares are assets of the company (and therefore, indirectly, of the current shareholders). The company can issue the stock to others in exchange for something that increases the value of the company by a comparable amount (e.g. cash or work). This makes it a fair trade which should not decrease the value of existing shareholders' stock.



          For example, suppose company X has 10 issued shares of stock and a total of 20 authorized shares, (leaving 10 unissued). The valuation of the company is $10, meaning each owned share is worth $1. Now someone comes and gives the company $1 for a new share of stock. Now the company has an extra dollar it didn't have before so it's now worth $11. There are also now 11 issued shares of stock, so each one is still worth a dollar. The original shareholders have been "diluted" in that they now own a smaller percentage of the company, but due to the increase in the company's value, they're just as well-off as they were before. Company X can do this 9 more times before it's out of authorized shares and needs to ask the shareholders for permission to increase the number.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 2 days ago

























          answered 2 days ago









          Daniel

          943517




          943517








          • 2




            It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
            – Daniel
            2 days ago










          • Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago










          • @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
            – David Schwartz
            20 hours ago














          • 2




            It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago






          • 1




            @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
            – Daniel
            2 days ago










          • Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
            – Ben Millwood
            2 days ago










          • @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
            – David Schwartz
            20 hours ago








          2




          2




          It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
          – Ben Millwood
          2 days ago




          It's worth pointing out that while the value of the stock doesn't go down, the voting power that shareholders will have has gone down... it's hard to say what's better out of owning 1/10 of a $10 company and owning 1/11 of an $11 company, but I can see people being potentially upset about it.
          – Ben Millwood
          2 days ago




          1




          1




          @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
          – Daniel
          2 days ago




          @Ben for sure. That's part of why the shareholders have to authorize more stock. Also, presumably shareholders own the company because they think it will eventually be worth more than it is today per share. If that's the case, diluting their percentage of ownership also dilutes their share of the value of the company's growth.
          – Daniel
          2 days ago












          Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
          – Ben Millwood
          2 days ago




          Hmm. Sort of. If you think the company will grow by $X then yes, your share of that has been diluted. If you think the company will grow by Y% then the stock issuance doesn't affect that. So it depends what you think the bottleneck on growth will be.
          – Ben Millwood
          2 days ago












          @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
          – David Schwartz
          20 hours ago




          @BenMillwood Presumably, the company would only do that if it could do something useful with the $1 it got.
          – David Schwartz
          20 hours ago


















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