stockholder
IPA: stˈɑkhoʊɫdɝ
noun
- (finance) One who owns stock.
- a company that maintains a stock of certain products.
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Examples of "stockholder" in Sentences
- The largest stockholder is SoftBank.
- Stockholder lawsuits are in the courts.
- Instead, the windfall went to stockholders.
- Brushaber was a stockholder in the railroad.
- The previous stockholders' stock was valueless.
- George Pedersen is the majority stockholder of ManTech.
- He was the largest stockholder in the Bank of Lakeview.
- The owner of the shares of a corporation is a stockholder.
- Brushaber, the appellant, was a stockholder in the railroad.
- Control is vested in the stockholders of the Mississippi Lumber Company.
- We believe that the repurchase program supports our objective of maximizing long-term stockholder value.
- Hedge-fund manager Lorber, by contrast, calls himself a "long-term stockholder" though he first bought shares in 2007.
- He mentioned the highest-ever year-end stock price of $76.99 and a nearly 500% increase in stockholder return to 60% in 2007 from 2002.
- For instance, the Coca-Cola Company recently agreed to obtain stockholder permission before approving large executive severance packages.
- That rare breed, the long-term stockholder, has no recourse after losses or poor dividends, and the taxpayer is compelled to pick up the outstanding tab.
- Based upon the Company's strong liquidity position and its commitment to drive long-term stockholder value, the Company's Board of Directors authorized a
- We are delighted by these results and their implications for creating long-term stockholder value, stated Tom Stallings, Chief Executive Officer of EasyLink.
- Quoting Management: We continue to execute our strategic plan to increase long-term stockholder value, and our accretive portfolio repositioning continues to progress steadily.
- "We look forward to receiving our license - which we expect to be issued within a reasonable time frame - and developing the Scioto Downs VLT facility, which we believe will drive significant long-term stockholder value and create hundreds of jobs in the Columbus area."
- Still, none of the fears I heard anywhere last week would trouble a long-term stockholder, except for one -- from Tyler Jenks, of Boston-based mutual-fund broker, Kanon Bloch Carrel Stocks, says Jenks, have fallen into a pattern he calls a hyperwave -- a series of four steps up in price, followed by three decisive steps down.
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