Authorized Share Capital

  

Remember civics class, when your teacher would drone on about the U.S. constitution? Well, America isn't the only thing with a founding document that lays out its general governing structure. Corporations have the same kind of foundational paperwork.
These docs are called articles of incorporation and they lay out the basic outline of how the company is set up.
One of the items included in these basic documents is the authorized share capital. This designates the amount of stock that a company can create. The term encompasses all the ownership shares that can exist.
The authorized share capital creates the company's pool of stock that can then get distributed as needed. From there, management can issue shares for founders, shares to sell in order to raise capital, shares to make acquisitions or shares to use as stock incentives for employees - basically for any other purpose that seems prudent.

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Finance: What is Authorized Stock?2 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is authorized stock... well when a company goes

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public and gets all incorporated well it changes legal status and part of it [People in a meeting]

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means having lots of meetings and signing more paperwork than most of us

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see in a lifetime well one of those pieces of paper is a charter or legal [Legal document appears]

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document which outlines a whole bunch of rules including the number of shares a

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company can issue well this number of shares is called authorized stock [Document stamped authorized stock]

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because it's the maximum total number of shares the company is authorized by its

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charter to issue ....well let's say company XXX wants to buy company Y it's like a

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genetic coding industry... company XXX has an authorized

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limit of a hundred million shares and currently has 85 million shares and five

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million options yet unvested outstanding technically it has 90 million shares

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outstanding..... it wants to

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print shares to buy company Y but company Y wants 20 percent of the [Company XXX printing stock]

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primary shares of the company XXX or 17 million shares no primary does not

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include options all right well company XXX cannot print enough share to buy Y [Shares printing]

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why? because it needs to get approval to change the charter and that is only

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doable by a majority vote of the outstanding shares at the time right and

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it's mostly common shareholders who will own those all right well the company has

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to have authorized shares to be able to make that transaction you know happen so

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that's authorized stock and now you know it isn't just stock that's been approved

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by you Mark Twain [Mark Twain sitting at a desk with stock]

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