New series of shares - definitie. Wat is New series of shares
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Wat (wie) is New series of shares - definitie

SINGLE UNIT OF OWNERSHIP IN A CORPORATION, MUTUAL FUND, OR ANY OTHER ORGANIZATION
Public shares; Share-holding; Share tips; Shares; Share of stock; Finance (Share); Shares of stock; Stock shares; Company shares
  • A share certificate from 1936 entitling the holder to shares in [[Greyhound Lines]].

New Design series         
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PHILIPPINE BANKNOTES AND COINS ISSUED FROM 1985 TO 2009
Philippine BSP Series currency notes; Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Series; New Design Series; BSP Series
The New Design Series (NDS) was the name used to refer to banknotes of the Philippine peso issued from 1985 to 2013; it was also known as the BSP Series when the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas was established in 1993. The coins, however, were issued from 1995 to 2017.
Method of Equal Shares         
  •   There are 9 projects. For example, the third group of 11 voters voted for D and G. The total budget of $1000 is divided equally among 100 voters. Each voter is given 10. Click on the arrow above the image in order to see the next steps of the method.
  •   Project D obtained most votes. If we divided the cost of D equally among its supporters, each voter would  pay $3.03. D is the project that minimises the maximal voter payment and so it is selected.
  •   Project A obtained 60 votes. Analogously to the previous step: if we divided the cost of A equally among its supporters, each voter would pay at most $3.33. Project A minimises the maximal voter payment and so is selected.
  •   Project C obtained 56 votes and is selected in the third round. Each supporter of C needs to pay $3.64, and this is the minimal possible payment. At this point the first 46 voters run out of their money.
  •   In the fourth step project G is selected. Some voters do not have enough money to participate equally in the purchase, so they pay all money left. The maximal payment for this candidate equals $6.97.
  •   In the last step, project H is selected. Now, only the fourth group of voters has money. They have enough money to afford the project they voted for. The maximal payment for the selected project is now $10.
  •  There are 8 available projects and 250 voters. For example, the first 65 voters assign value 30 to project B and value 10 to projects E and G. The total budget of $2500 is divided equally among 250 voters. Each voter is given $10. Click on the arrow above the image in order to see the next steps of the method.
  •  Project B is selected first, and its cost is divided proportionally to the values that the voters assigned to the project. In this case, this means it is divided equally among the voters from the first and the second group. Each such voter pays $2, and for those $2 they get the utility of 30. Thus the maximal payment-per-utility equals 2/30 \approx 0.066 . If a different project was selected, the maximal payment-per-utility would be higher.
  •  Consider project G and the payments presented in the picture. The payments are not equal, but they are still proportional to the values that the voters' assigned to G. The maximal voter's payment-per-utility for project G equals 1/10 = 4/40 = 10/100 = 0.1 and this value is minimal across all projects. Consequently, G is selected. After this round the voters from the fourth group have run out of money.
  •   In the third round project F is selected. Every supporter of F pays an equal part of the price - except for voters from the fourth group, who have no money. If they had any, they would also need to participate. Nevertheless, the maximal payment-per-utility for project F is minimal (it equals 0.2), hence F is elected.
  •  In the fourth round, project E is elected. Consider the payments presented in the picture, and note that the voters from the third group have too little money to participate in paying proportionally to their utilities, yet they all still have $4 dollars left. In such case, they pay all money they still have. The maximal payment-per-utility (paid by the voters from the first group) is minimal, and equals circa 0.54.
  •  In the last step, project C is elected. The voters from the second and the sixth group have too little money to participate in paying proportionally to their utilities, hence they pay as much as possible. The maximal payment-per-utility is paid for the fifth group of voters and equals 0.7.
  •  The rule spent $2380 out of $2500 in the budget. While the voters from the first and the fifth group have positive savings, no project can be afforded by their supporters. Hence the algorithm stops. The outcome can be further completed. According to the utilitarian strategy project H would be selected as its cost per utility equals 110 / (2\cdot 50 + 1\cdot 10 + 1 \cdot 55)  and is maximal across the projects that would fit within the budget constraint.
METHOD OF COUNTING BALLOTS FOLLOWING ELECTIONS
Draft:Method of Equal Shares
The Method of Equal Shares (in early papers the method has been also referred to as Rule X, but since 2022 the authors started using the name "method of equal shares") is a proportional method of counting ballots that applies to participatory budgeting to committee elections and to simultaneous public decisions.
Win Shares         
BOOK BY BILL JAMES
Win shares (statistic); Win share; Career win shares; Win shares; Win Shares (book)
Win Shares is a book about baseball written by Bill James and Jim Henzler, published by STATS, Inc. in 2002.

Wikipedia

Share (finance)

In financial markets, a share is a unit of equity ownership in the capital stock of a corporation, and can refer to units of mutual funds, limited partnerships, and real estate investment trusts. Share capital refers to all of the shares of an enterprise. The owner of shares in a company is a shareholder (or stockholder) of the corporation. A share is an indivisible unit of capital, expressing the ownership relationship between the company and the shareholder. The denominated value of a share is its face value, and the total of the face value of issued shares represent the capital of a company, which may not reflect the market value of those shares.

The income received from the ownership of shares is a dividend. There are different types of shares such as equity shares, preference shares, deferred shares, redeemable shares, bonus shares, right shares, and employee stock option plan shares.