Most businesses start out as a small
company, owned by one person or by a partnership. The most common type
of business when there are multiple owners is a corporation. The law
sees a corporation as real, live person. Like an adult, a corporation is
treated as a distinct and independent individual who has rights and
responsibilities. A corporation's "birth certificate" is the legal form
that is filed with the Secretary of State of the state in which the
corporation is created, or incorporated. It must have a legal name, just
like a person.
A corporation is separate from its owners. It's
responsible for its own debts. The bank can't come after the
stockholders if a corporation goes bankrupt.
A corporation issues
ownership share to persons who invest money in the business. These
ownership shares are documented by stock certificates, which state the
name of the owner and how many shares are owned. the corporation has to
keep a register, or list, of how many shares everyone owns. Owners of a
corporation are called stockholders because they own shares of stock
issued by the corporation. One share of stock is one unit of ownership;
how much one share is worth depends on the total number of shares that
the business issues. the more shares a business issues, the smaller the
percentage of total owners' equity each share represents.
Stock
shares come in different classes of stock. Preferred stockholders are
promised a certain amount of cash dividends each year. Common
stockholders have the most risk. If a corporation ends up in financial
trouble, it's required to pay off its liabilities first. If any money is
left over, then that money goes first to the preferred stockholders. If
anything is left over after that, then that money is distributed to the
common stockholders.

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