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  2. Treasury stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_stock

    A treasury stock or reacquired stock is stock which is bought back by the issuing company, reducing the amount of outstanding stock on the open market ("open market" including insiders' holdings). Stock repurchases are used as a tax efficient method to put cash into shareholders' hands, rather than paying dividends, in jurisdictions that treat ...

  3. Share repurchase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Share_repurchase

    Share repurchase. Share repurchase, also known as share buyback or stock buyback, is the reacquisition by a company of its own shares. [1] It represents an alternate and more flexible way (relative to dividends) of returning money to shareholders. [2] Repurchases allow stockholders to delay taxes which they would have been required to pay on ...

  4. What are stock buybacks and why do companies use them? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/stock-buybacks-why-companies...

    A stock buyback, or share repurchase, is when a company repurchases its own stock, reducing the total number of shares outstanding. In effect, buybacks “re-slice the pie” of profits into fewer ...

  5. Repurchase agreement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repurchase_agreement

    t. e. A repurchase agreement, also known as a repo, RP, or sale and repurchase agreement, is a form of short-term borrowing, mainly in government securities. The dealer sells the underlying security to investors and, by agreement between the two parties, buys them back shortly afterwards, usually the following day, at a slightly higher price.

  6. Stock buybacks have surged in the weeks since Washington ...

    www.aol.com/finance/stock-buybacks-surged-weeks...

    Some announcements this year like Chevron's have included a dividend increase alongside the stock repurchase plans. But other companies, like Meta, maintained a dividend of $0.00.

  7. Treasury Nets $2.1 Billion in GM's Buyback of Preferred Shares

    www.aol.com/news/2010-12-15-treasury-nets-2...

    The latest transaction further reduces the government's stake in GM to about 33%, or about 500 million shares of common stock, down from the 61.5% that Treasury held prior to GM's IPO.

  8. Issued shares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issued_shares

    In economics and law, issued shares are the shares of a corporation which have been allocated (allotted) and are subsequently held by shareholders. [1][2] The act of creating new issued shares is called issuance. Allotment is simply the transfer of shares to a subscriber. After allotment, a subscriber becomes a shareholder, though usually that ...

  9. Buyback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buyback

    Buyback contract, a type of financing deal in the Iranian petroleum industry. Buyback of shares, see Treasury stock. Stock buyback, also called share repurchase or share buyback, the repurchase of stock by the company that issued it.