Closely Held Stock

In the case of corporations, a stock is deemed to be “closely held” when a small group owns and controls a significantly large majority stake in the total number of shares, with shares being sold seldomly (if ever). This is often the case with entrepreneur-led companies that eventually go public.

The amount of shares offered to the public may be anywhere from 10-20% of the total, with the founder’s family and private investors controlling the rest. This scenario often is designed to prevent board takeovers of management and its decisions via voting proxy and other types of corporate infighting. For example, Walmart, founded by Sam Walton many decades ago, is still controlled over 50 percent by the Walton family.

Owning closely held stock of a valuable company is a common source of wealth for many famous entertainment icons, such as Anthony Stark, Quincy Magoo, Oliver Queen, Scrooge McDuck, Richard Rich, Veronica Lodge, Bruce Wayne, Elmer J. Fudd, and Lex Luthor, among others.

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Finance: What is a Holding Company?6 Views

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Finance a la shmoop what is a holding company? okay okay enough of that [Man and woman crying in each others arms]

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different kind of holding company your great grandpappy Milton died and left

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you 20 million bucks you've always wanted to own your own bar or like 20 of

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them so you hop in your f150 which you lovingly named Roscoe and you buy 20

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bars for a million dollars each but they produce so much cash that well a year

00:29

later you have five million bucks to spend on more bars but you're kind of [Car drives between bars across the US]

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done with driving all over creation in old Roscoe there so you buy a mega

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distillery and then you buy a DJ music management company and then you buy an

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insurance company specializing in insuring bars you know it's a lot of

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pool tables and fights that happens in that way in movies anyway and then you [Man punches a man at a pool table]

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buy a pool cue stick supply company because well in those fights they

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always seem to be the first thing to break each of these businesses exist

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separately and makes money on its own so you have a whole pile of assets here

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kind of different divisions they're pretty well separated in each of which

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kind of lives on its own but it's happy to have a dotted line relationship with

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the other companies that are sort of in the family and you note that in any [Person highlights day in the calendar]

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given year one company might be very profitable while another might be losing

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money so you come up with a clever idea of having a holding company put all of

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the assets into one legal entity framed as an operating company so that taxable

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gains from one division can be efficiently offset by losses from

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another and the party rages on so this is a pretty common structure in [People partying at a club]

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industries where one hand kind of sort of washes the other

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check out all the little companies that comprise Time Warner, HBO, Turner, TBS and

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kind of part of Hulu and on and on and on and what about alphabet you have a

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holding company for Google yeah well there's you know YouTube and nest labs

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and calico and WayMo a bunch of other stuff so yeah a holding company holds

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other companies and a lot of times it's done just for tax optimization and for

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friendly dealings among the various partners got it when things aren't going well well [Man and woman crying]

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and it's a different kind of holding company and there's a whole lot of

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crying....

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