Authorized Stock
Authorized stock (or authorized shares) is the maximum number of shares a corporation may legally issue, as specified in its articles of incorporation or corporate charter. It sets an upper limit; a company cannot issue more shares than this total without amending its charter and typically gaining shareholder approval.
Key terms
- Authorized shares: The maximum shares allowed by the charter.
- Issued shares: Shares the company has actually issued to shareholders.
- Outstanding shares: Issued shares currently held by investors (includes restricted shares and the float).
- Float: Issued shares freely available to trade on public markets.
- Restricted shares: Issued but not freely tradable (often reserved for employees).
- Treasury stock: Unissued or reacquired shares held by the company.
Note: Outstanding shares can never exceed authorized shares.
Why companies authorize more shares than they issue
Companies often keep authorized shares well above current issuance to retain flexibility:
* Raise capital later through additional offerings without immediate charter changes.
* Reserve shares for employee compensation, stock option plans, or acquisitions.
* Maintain control and reduce the risk of dilutive pressure that could enable hostile takeovers.
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Example: If a company authorizes 1,000,000 shares, issues 500,000 in an IPO, reserves 50,000 for employee options, and later sells 150,000 in a secondary offering, it would retain 300,000 shares in its treasury (1,000,000 − 500,000 − 50,000 − 150,000).
Example
A corporate charter might specify large authorizations to provide room for future needs. For instance, a charter could authorize 5 billion shares of common stock and 500 million shares of preferred stock, with provisions to increase authorized common shares if needed to accommodate preferred conversions—typically subject to shareholder approval.
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Dilution considerations
A large gap between authorized and outstanding shares represents potential for dilution. Issuing additional shares can:
* Reduce an existing shareholder’s ownership percentage and voting power.
* Lower earnings per share (EPS) by spreading earnings across more shares.
Investors monitor authorized-vs-outstanding totals to assess dilution risk.
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Where to find authorized shares
Authorized share totals are disclosed in a company’s articles of incorporation or corporate charter and are often reported in SEC filings (such as the 10‑K) and the company’s investor relations materials.