Common stock typically provides the owner with voting rights on key corporate matters, making answer B correct. Common shareholders generally vote to elect the board of directors and may vote on significant corporate actions such as mergers, major reorganizations, or other proposals submitted for shareholder approval. Voting rights are a core distinguishing feature of common stock and are frequently tested on the SIE as part of understanding equity ownership and shareholder rights.
A warrant (choice A) is a derivative-like security that gives the holder the right to purchase the issuer’s stock at a specified price before expiration. Warrant holders do not have voting rights unless and until they exercise the warrant and become stockholders. Preferred stock (choice C) typically has characteristics closer to a hybrid: it pays a stated dividend and often has priority over common stock in dividends and liquidation, but it usually does not carry voting rights (though preferred may gain voting rights in special situations, such as when dividends are in arrears, depending on the issue terms). A corporate bond (choice D) is debt; bondholders are creditors, not owners, and generally do not vote on corporate governance matters (though bond covenants may provide protections and certain consent rights in specific restructuring situations).
The SIE emphasizes the relationship between security type and investor rights: equity ownership (common stock) comes with participation in corporate governance through voting, while debt instruments provide contractual cash flows and creditor protections but not ownership voting rights.
Contribute your Thoughts:
Chosen Answer:
This is a voting comment (?). You can switch to a simple comment. It is better to Upvote an existing comment if you don't have anything to add.
Submit