| 1. | stock that ordinarily has no preference in the matter of dividends or assets and represents the residual ownership of a corporate business. |
| 2. | Animal Husbandry. stock that is not purebred. |

| common stock n. Capital stock that is secondary to preferred stock in the distribution of dividends and often of assets. |
Common Stock
A security that represents ownership in a corporation. Holders of common stock exercise control by electing a board of directors and voting on corporate policy. Common stockholders are on the bottom of the priority ladder for ownership structure. In the event of liquidation common shareholders have rights to a company's assets only after bondholders, preferred shareholders, and other debtholders have been paid in full. In the U.K., these are called "ordinary shares".
Investopedia Commentary
If the company goes bankrupt the common stockholders will not receive their money until the creditors and preferred shareholders have received their respective share of the leftover assets. This makes common stock riskier than debt or preferred shares. The upside to common shares is that they usually outperform bonds and preferred shares in the long run.
Related Links
Stock Basics Tutorial
Knowing Your Rights As A Shareholder
See also: Board of Directors, Bond, Liquidation, Preferred Stock, Stock
Also spelled: Commonshares
common stock