Securities can be issued in two ways: registered, or bearer. These days, most are issued as registered, meaning that the business that sells the security keeps track of it.
With the bearer form though, there is no record of who owns the security, and whoever has the certificate in hand is assumed to be the owner and entitled to the payments on said security. The bearer share is an equity security issued in this way: the business who issued it holds no record of it. The company pays dividends to whoever presents the certificate. As you may imagine, this leaves a lot of room for conflict over who is claiming the share, which may be partially why this practice is dwindling.
The incentive here is that transfer tax may not apply (because the transfer is not recorded). The downside is that the share can be lost if you lose the certificate, which stands as proof.
Picture inheriting from a great-grandparent. The bearer share might simply be a certificate in a lockbox to be sorted out...whenever someone gets to it. You might benefit with the lack of extra tax, but then again, if you have a shifty cousin that gets to the box first, they could take your certificates and you would have a hard time proving it.
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Finance: What is the Maturity of a Bond?95 Views
finance a la shmoop what is the maturity of a bond ?oh come on.
doorbell bash, and prank phone calls whoopee cushions for the teacher? like how mature [person rings door bell]
is that ? right well a bond matures when it comes due. that is a company borrows a
hundred million bucks in 2019 for ten years paying five percent interest or
five million dollars a year to rent that money along the way, and then 2029 comes
around and well the bond matures. and lenders have that hundred million [bond is stamped]
dollars to the company get how much well if the company pays off its bond like it
promised then that last year 2029 the lenders get a hundred five million
dollars in that final year -that is they get the five million bucks in interest
or rent on the money that year and then they get their original principal back.
just like the person who borrowed it promised what happened that is the bond
will have matured. so goodbye whoopee cushions, and late night parties in hello
NPR in a responsible bedtime. [girl snores ]
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