delisted

How long can a stock remain at below $1 before de-listed at NASDAQ exchange?

That is at the NASDAQ exchange. What about the NYSE? What is their equivalent standard and requirement? Is their minimum at $2 and for how long?

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Tuesday, March 30th, 2010 Uncategorized 1 Comment

when a company is delisted on nasdaq what happens when it gets reinstated? Does the shares stay the same ?

I mean lets say I own 300 shares of XYZ. XYZ gets delisted due to bankruptcy. When it re-emerges from bankruptcy and gets reinstated by nasdaq those 300 shares are still valid?
If i had 300 shares before it got delisted will i have 300 when it gets reinstated?

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Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 nasdaq 1 Comment

What happens to your investment when a stock gets delisted from NASDAQ?

So what happens when you buy a stock and it gets delisted from NASDAQ like Spansion? I didn’t buy it. Do you just lose your investment? When it gets delisted it is an OTC stock right? Also lets say you bought it when it ’s an OTC and they go back up to were they were. Can they get put back into NASDAQ? What happens to your investment if that happens?
Sorry SpanKy, but that’s not what delisting means…

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Saturday, March 13th, 2010 nasdaq 4 Comments

Dow Jones Index

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (NYSE: DJI, also called the DJIA, Dow 30, INDP, or informally the Dow Jones or The Dow) is one of several stock market indices, created by nineteenth-century Wall Street Journal editor and Dow Jones & Company co-founder Charles Dow. It is an index that shows how certain stocks have traded. Dow compiled the index to gauge the performance of the industrial sector of the American stock market. It is the second-oldest U.S. market index, after the Dow Jones Transportation Average, which Dow also created. The average is computed from the stock prices of 30 of the largest and most widely held public companies in the United States. The "industrial" portion of the name is largely historical—many of the 30 modern components have little to do with traditional heavy industry. The average is price-weighted. To compensate for the effects of stock splits and other adjustments, it is currently a scaled average, not the actual average of the prices of its component stocks—the sum of the component prices is divided by a divisor, which changes whenever one of the component stocks has a stock split or stock dividend, to generate the value of the index. Since the divisor is currently less than one, the value of the index is higher than the sum of the component prices.
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