Skip to main content

Ordinary share

An ordinary share is the basic unit of equity ownership in a company, carrying one vote per share and a residual claim on profits and assets after debt holders and preference shareholders are paid first.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

See it move

Loading infographic...

A company is wound up with assets sold for €2,400,000. Creditors are paid €1,500,000 and preference shareholders €300,000, leaving €600,000 for ordinary shareholders — the residual claim. Across 200,000 ordinary shares, that is €600,000 ÷ 200,000 = €3.00 per share, the last amount paid in the liquidation order.

Where it fits
SubjectCorporate FinanceCoreTopicCapital Structure & LeverageCoreTopicBond & Equity ValuationCore

The formula

LaTeX
Vshare=ALPNV_{share} = \frac{A - L - P}{N}

Variables

Total assets ()
Liabilities (debt) ()
Preference share claims ()
Number of ordinary shares (shares)

The amount each ordinary share would receive if the company's assets were liquidated and all higher-ranking claims were paid first.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A company is liquidated. Its assets are sold for €5,100,000. It owes creditors €3,200,000 and owes its preference shareholders €400,000. There are 100,000 ordinary shares outstanding. How much does each ordinary share receive?

Select an answer to check your understanding.