record date investment & finance definition
The
date by which an investor must hold shares of a company’s stock in order to
receive a dividend or capital gains distribution. If someone purchases the
company’s stock after the record date, he or she isn’t eligible to receive the
dividend or capital gains distribution. The company determines what the record
date will be. An investor becomes a shareholder
of record on the date the stock is purchased, not on the settlement
date, which is usually three days later. Record dates also are used to
determine which shareholders can vote on initiatives put forth at the annual or
special shareholder meetings, such as merger proposals.
See record date in Wall Street Words
The date on which a firm's books are closed during the process of identifying the owners of a certain class of securities for purposes of transmitting dividends, interest, proxies, financial reports, and other documentation to them. For example, only the common stockholders who are listed on the record date will receive the dividends that are to be mailed on the payment date. Also called
date of record. See also
ex-dividend,
interest dates.
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