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Can an investor ever be stuck with a stock? |
Meaning, can a demand for a stock ever become so low that no one will buy it? or is there always someone that will buy stocks (e.g brokers) if you want to sell? I guess may be an explination on what happens to stocks when they are traded can also help. Thanks! Yes, there are lots of examples in history of stock that has become worthless. Ask any stockholder of the old Kmart or of Enron. Generally speaking there is always a market for a stock at some price. In other words there is a price at which someone will buy it. Most stocks have excellent liquidity meaning that they trade readily. This is due in part to market makers. These are firms whose funtion it is to buy and sell a particular stock to provide liquidity for the market. However, there are instances when prices can and do fluctuate dramatically. If for example a company announces that its earnings have fallen 30% when everyone had expected them to rise 20%, the price at which the stock will then trade is most likely to be 50% below the price at which it previously traded. If no one wants to buy, the sellers will lower their price to make the deal more appealing. When a stock gets a bad reputation, the price falls fast until the buyers think that it's cheap enough to be a safe investment. Sometimes, I guess you can't get cheap enough. Unless the company is bankrupt, you can never be stuck with a stock, there will always someone willing to purchase it at some price, unless of course the company has declared it will be bankrupt. Thee are plenty of examples of stocks that have become worthless. Enron is the best example that comes to mind. A stock can becomes so worthless that even brokers will not buy it. This is the exact problem I had with a wind energy stock that I loved. It is called Repower, symbol RPWSF.pk. It is a German stock that trades on the pink sheets. Days would pass, and there would be no trading volume at all. I ended up selling this stock and buying Gamesa, GCTAF.pk. This is another wind energy stock, but this one has more volume. Excellent question, and the answer is YES. When a stock is delisted from an exchange, it can be difficult to sell it... normally because it has plummeted in value. I know plenty of folks who have worthless stock certificates... they didn't sell when there was still a market. It happened to me in my early investment days... I bought a little company called River Oaks which manufactured mobile homes. I thought it was a great buy at just 25 cents a share... and it was still listed on the NYSE. What I didn't realize, of course, was that it was bankrupt and it was just a matter of time before it was delisted. Yes, I still have those old certificates somewhere... and they are indeed worthless. As you say, I'm stuck with a stock! |
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