|
Definition of Employee-shareholders - Finance dictionary
|
Employee-shareholders (See Chapter 40 of the Vernimmen)
Many companies have invited their employees to become shareholders. In most of these cases, employees hold a small proportion of the shares, and in a few cases the majority. This shareholder group, loyal and non-volatile, lends a degree of stability to the capital and in general, strengthens the Position of the majority shareholder, if any, and of the management.
Employee-shareholders (See Chapter 40 of the Vernimmen)
Many companies have invited their employees to become shareholders. In most of these cases, employees hold a small proportion of the shares, and in a few cases the majority. This shareholder group, loyal and non-volatile, lends a degree of stability to the capital and in general, strengthens the Position of the majority shareholder, if any, and of the management.
See
all terms in the dictionary of finance
To know more about it, look at what we have already written on this subject :
Find : Employee-shareholders
|
|
|
|
You get more than just a glossary
on www.vernimmen.com:
- A monthly newsletter with over 60,000
subscribers
- 610,000 financial data for over 16,000
groups
- A 279-question quiz with answers
- A text book that has
sold 130,000 copies
- And all the rest |
To find other words in the
dictionary of finance, click on the first letter of the word you are looking
for:
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definitions of terms begining
with the same letter as "Employee-shareholders"
:
E-commerce
Earn-out clause
Earnings
Earnings Before Interest and Taxes
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation
Earnings per share, EPS
Earnings retention ratio
Earnings yield
EBIT multiple
EBITDA margin
EBITDA multiple
EBITDA, Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation
EBITDAR, Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortisation and rent
EBRD
Economic analysis
Economic and Monetary Union
Economic indicators of value creation
Economic profit
Economic rent
Economic risk
Economic value added, EVA, EVA Model
Economy of scale
Efficient frontier
Efficient market
Efficient market hypothesis
Efficient portfolio
EGM
Electronic bill of exchange
Electronic promissory note
Eligibility criteria
Eligible
Eligible bills
Embedded option
Embedded Value
Emerging Markets
Employee stock ownership program, ESOP
Employee-shareholders
EMTN, Euro MTN
EMU
Encumbrance
Endowment
Enhancement
ENPV
|
Enterprise value
Enterprise value multiples
EONIA, Euro Overnight Index Average
EPOS
EPS
Equalisation tax
Equilibrium value
Equipment Trust Certificates
Equity
Equity affiliate
Equity beta
Equity capital multiples
Equity credit
Equity cycle
Equity in drag
Equity kicker
Equity line
Equity method
Equity premium puzzle
Equity ratio
Equity risk premium
Equity sweetener
Equity warrant
Equity-for-debt swap
Equity-linked securities
Equivalent annual cost method
Escalation clause
Escalator clause
Escrow account
ESOP
ETF
EUR
EUREX
EURIBOR, Euribor
Eurimean
Euro
Euro MTN
Euro Overnight Index Average
Euro STOXX
Eurobond
Euroclear
Eurocredits
Euronext
|
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
European Central Bank
European Interbank Offered Rate
European option
European Union
European-style option
Eurostat
Eurozone
Eurozone Public Offering of Securities
EVA
EVA model
Event of default
Event-study analysis
Exceptional items
Excess loss
Exchange controthe government authorities in a given country.
Exchange ratio
Exchange risk
Exchange traded fund
Exchangeable bonds
Exclusive negotiations
Exercise date
Exercise period
Exit clause
Expanded net present value, ENPV
Expected equity risk premium
Expected outcome
Expected return
Expected return of a market portfolio
Expenses
Expert systems
Explicit forecast period
Export credit
Exposure
Expropriation effect
Extended trade-off model
Extendible
Extendible note
EXtensible Business Reporting Language
External capital
External projects
Extraordinary general meeting of shareholders, EGM
Extraordinary items
|
Employee-shareholders (See Chapter 40 of the Vernimmen)
Many companies have invited their employees to become shareholders. In most of these cases, employees hold a small proportion of the shares, and in a few cases the majority. This shareholder group, loyal and non-volatile, lends a degree of stability to the capital and in general, strengthens the Position of the majority shareholder, if any, and of the management.
|
|