Adjusted Closing Price

  

Categories: Stocks, Real Estate, Trading

On any day, you can look up a stock’s closing price and get one number. Clear as clear can be, right?

Not so fast. Closing price can be one number, but it can be affected behind the scenes by corporate stuff like rights offerings, dividends, stock splits, and other corporate actions. The closing price, if it's affected by this stuff, gets adjusted to reflect said actions.

A famous example is the one-time enormous dividend made by MSFT (Microsoft) when Bill Gates retired from the CEO role. That little action required some adjusting. Without it, the closing price of MSFT would have looked less spectacular than it really was.

BTW, adjusted closing price is important when looking at historic closing prices or when doing analysis on historic returns. If you're just an average investor, though, you probably won't even run into it.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Rights Offering?6 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is a rights offering all right people think a right

00:08

to buy and buy at a discount kind of companies may be fearful of a hostile [Woman pointing at woman behind reception desk]

00:15

takeover or some other big bad event that harms them and they want to give

00:19

existing shareholders preferential treatment over external non shareholders [Shareholders at a night club]

00:25

this rights offering is essentially a hostile takeover defense so they might [Bear attacking rights offering]

00:31

say ok pals for the next 60 days you have the right to buy an additional

00:34

share of our stock which is currently trading for 312 dollars each for $200 a [Man discussing company stock at presentation]

00:40

share and note the discount wink wink and you need to currently own 5 shares

00:44

for every one that you'll then buy sound like a plan well that is the company is [Man throws rights offering to woman]

00:50

offering those rights to buy at a discount and the shareholders can sell

00:54

those rights to other non shareholders for cash in essence is kind of a funky

00:59

one-time dividend that actually hurts both the would be external hostile [Metal anvil land on a bear]

01:03

takeover people but unfortunately also hurts the employees who have stock

01:07

options not actual shares so then they suffer the dilution of this rights [Anvil lands on employees]

01:12

offering with nothing to show for it yeah and you may ask is there such a

01:17

thing as a hostile take under mmm wondering about that [People protesting outside metal fence]

Up Next

Finance: What are At-the-Close Order and At-the-Opening Order?
24 Views

What are At-the-Close Orders and At-the-Opening Orders? At-the-Close orders are given to brokers and the brokers can only fill them at the close of...

Finance: What Rights Does a Public Stockholder Have?
67 Views

What rights does a public stockholder have? Common shareholders elect the board of directors. They vote. They have the right to quarterly financial...

Finance: What is a Warrant?
8 Views

What is a warrant? Hit play to find out.

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)