A
company issues new shares of stock or new bonds in order to raise
capital to maintain or expand its business.
The investors who buy these securities when
they’re issued may hold them or sell them — either immediately
or at some point in the future — on what’s known as
the open or
secondary
market.
Those sales occur on
exchanges,
such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), and electronic securities
markets,
such as the NASDAQ Stock Market. The pace of the trading, the
prices investors pay to buy, and the gains that they
realize
when they sell all reflect supply and demand within these exchanges
and markets.
The issuing companies aren’t usually
involved in secondary market transactions and don’t share
in any profit investors may realize by selling securities for
more than their purchase price. The exception is that companies
do have the right to buy up shares of their own stock and to
call,
or redeem, certain bonds.
Investment banks
When a company wants to issue
new stocks or bonds, it usually works with an investment
bank. The bank helps determine the interest rate a
bond must offer to be attractive to investors, and
it sets the initial stock price at the amount it thinks
investors will pay. Then the bank buys up the entire
issue,
often in collaboration with other banks, and
makes the securities available to brokerage firms,
who sell them to investors.