Historically, financial markets originated as a means of
providing businesses with the investment capital they needed to
grow and prosper; and despite the growth of these markets as an
arena for pure speculation, businesses' need for investment
capital is still the driving force behind the world's markets.
There are two ways for companies to raise money for long-term
business investment - they can borrow it and/or they can issue
shares - otherwise known as stocks. In the world of
corporate finance, stocks are called equity capital and
borrowed money is debt capital.
Equity (stocks/shares) differs fundamentally from debt in that
it represents an ownership interest in a company - if you buy a
stock you are buying a share of the company not lending the
company money. And for investors this fundamental distinction
has two important implications.
1. An equityholder is not entitled to any regular
payment
If you lend a company money or buy its debt securities
(
bonds or
money market instruments) you are (usually) entitled to a
regular interest payment. Stocks provide no entitlement to any
kind of regular payment.
2. An equityholder is not entitled to the repayment of their
investment
If you lend a company money or buy its debt securities you are
entitled to the repayment of that loan at some predetermined
point in the future. When you buy a stock you are effectively
purchasing part of the company and the company has no
obligation to give you your money back.
So, how exactly do shareholders make money out of the ownership
interest conferred on them by owning a stock?