A mutual shareholder or stockholder is an individual or company (including a corporation) that legally owns one or more shares of stock in a joint stock company. A company's shareholders collectively own that company and are the members of the company by signing the memorandum of association . Thus, the typical goal of such companies is to enhance shareholder value.

Stockholders are granted special privileges depending on the class of stock. These rights may include:

  • The right to vote on matters such as elections to the board of directors. Usually, stockholders have one vote per share owned, but sometimes this is not the case.
  • The right to propose shareholder resolutions.
  • The right to share in distributions of the company's income.
  • The right to purchase new shares issued by the company.
  • The right to a company's assets during, a liquidation of the company.

However, stockholder's rights to a company's assets are subordinate to the rights of the company's creditors. This means that stockholders typically receive nothing if a company is liquidated after bankruptcy (if the company had had enough to pay its creditors, it would not have entered bankruptcy, although a stock may have value after a bankruptcy if there is the possibility that the debts of the company will be restructured).

Stockholders or shareholders are considered one of the best out by some to be a partial subset of stakeholders, which may include anyone who has a direct or indirect equity interest in the business entity or someone with even a non-pecuniary interest in a non-profit organization. Thus it might be common to call volunteer contributors to an association stakeholders, even though they are not shareholders.

Although directors and officers of a company are bound by fiduciary duties to act in the best interest of the shareholders, the shareholders themselves normally do not have such duties towards each other.

However, in a few unusual cases, some courts have been willing to imply such a duty between shareholders. For example, in California, majority shareholders of closely held corporations have a duty not to destroy the value of the shares held by minority shareholders.

Shareholders play an important role in raising capital for organizations. So these figures pose a great opportunity for all those who are looking for a lucrative option to invest money. Companies typically provide all the necessary proofs to shareholders to show that they are investing at a right place. For example, fair and reliable audit figures from income statement and balance sheet are used as evidence of overall performance for the benefit of shareholders.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Fri Mar 5 01:21:50 2010

If more shareholders are introduced how does it affect the shareholders agreement?
Q. In a shareholders agreement it lists all the shareholders by name. If there are 20 shareholders who do the agreement and then at a later date (say a year) another shareholder signs the agreement. What happens later, does a new copy of the shareholders agreement need to be send to all the shareholders? This is assuming no other changes have been made. What if the present shareholders object to the new shareholder? What can they do? Is the shareholder agreement between an individual shareholder and the corporation OR is it between the corporation and all the shareholders?
Asked by Sam - Thu Sep 17 14:00:04 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. A shareholders' agreement (sometimes referred to in the U.S. as a stockholders' agreement) is an agreement amongst the shareholders of a company. In strict legal theory, the relationships amongst the shareholders and those between the shareholders and the company are regulated by the constitutional documents of the company;however, where there are a relatively small number of shareholders it is quite common in practice for the shareholder to supplement the constitutional document. There are a number of reasons why the shareholders may wish to supplement (or supersede) the constitutional documents of the company in this way:
Answered by Carla - Thu Sep 17 14:15:17 2009

From a companies perspective, why offer shareholders larger dividends once they have invested?
Q. Am I correct in thinking that once shareholders have bought shares, if you are not planning on selling further shares, that there is no reason to increase dividends other than that if you do not please the shareholders they may intervene and vote to change management? In this case, if the majority of shares were owned by the company itself, and shareholders did not have control, wouldn't the company be better re-investing the cash rather than paying dividends?
Asked by Another Nameless Face - Sat Feb 16 21:17:25 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Hi! One way investors vote is to sell their shares if they think that they are not receiving enough of a reward for their ownership. One way you make money on stocks is that they increase in value. Another is that they pay good dividends. Paying good dividends attracts people who live on dividends, and depend on the value of the shares increasing at least at the inflation rate. Many companies do actually reinvest their profits into developing new products and markets for their products. Some companies buy back their shares. Buying back shares makes sense when more shares are needed to attract new employees, or to keep key employees. Since Government taxes profits, it is usually a better plan to borrow money for new product development and… [cont.]
Answered by Joseph G - Sat Feb 16 21:41:47 2008

What happens to shareholders of common stock if that stock on the NYSE falls below $1 and gets de-listed?
Q. A friend of mine said the shareholder is out whatever stake in stock he had. I said the stock and company still exist as does the value at the time it is de-listed (not counting a possible C11 bk later). It may be tough to be relisted again and may fall into the penny stock category (highly risky and volatile) but is not the end of the shareholders money. Who is right?
Asked by great1putt - Thu Apr 2 16:01:15 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. You are right, technically. If a stock is de-listed it goes on the Pink Sheets but those stocks aren't worth hardly anything as no one substantial buys them. So technically you still own the shares (I know my broker won't even deal on the Pink Sheets so how I get access to them is beyond me!) but they are good as gone because they're usually worthless.
Answered by Stephen T - Thu Apr 2 16:06:28 2009

From Yahoo Answer Search: "Shareholders"
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From Yahoo Image Search: "Shareholders"
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Law Offices of Howard G. Smith Announces Investigation on Behalf ...
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Law Offices of Howard G. Smith Announces Investigation on Behalf ...

unknown

Sat, 27 Feb 2010 10:47:24 GM

BENSALEM, Penn.--(BUSINES​S WIRE)--Law Offices of Howard G. Smith announces that it is investigating potential claims against Ormat Technologies, Inc. ( Ormat or the Company ) (NYSE:ORA) concerning possible securities violations ...

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Bids Must Suffer When Shareholders Have Stakes in Both Companies ...

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Mon, 22 Feb 2010 15:04:04 GM

Boards accept that . shareholders. act out of self-interest but they can respect investors whose objective is to profit from a higher share price. Yet.

BofA Shareholders Approve TARP Payback Plan
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BofA Shareholders Approve TARP Payback Plan

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ue, 23 Feb 2010 20:05:50 GM

Shareholders. of Bank of America on Tuesday approved an increase in the bank's common shares to finance its repayment of government bailout money.

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