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1. INVESTMENT BASICS
2. SECURITIES
3. PRIMARY MARKET
3.1 ISSUE OF SHARES
3.2 FOREIGN CAPITAL ISSUANCE
4. SECONDARY MARKET
5. DERIVATIVES
6. DEPOSITORY
7. MUTUAL FUNDS
8. MISCELLANEOUS
9. CONCEPTS & MODES OF ANALYSIS
10. RATIO ANALYSIS |
An American Depositary Share ("ADS") is a U.S. dollar denominated form of
equity ownership in a non-U.S. company. It represents the foreign shares of
the company held on deposit by a custodian bank in the company's home
country and carries the corporate and economic rights of the foreign shares,
subject to the terms specified on the ADR certificate.
One or several ADSs can be represented by a physical ADR certificate. The
terms ADR and ADS are often used interchangeably.
ADSs provide U.S. investors with a convenient way to invest in overseas
securities and to trade non-U.S. securities in the U.S. ADSs are issued by a
depository bank, such as JPMorgan Chase Bank. They are traded in the
same manner as shares in U.S. companies, on the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) and the American Stock Exchange (AMEX) or quoted on NASDAQand the over-the-counter (OTC) market.
Although ADSs are U.S. dollar denominated securities and pay dividends in
U.S. dollars, they do not eliminate the currency risk associated with an
investment in a non-U.S. company.
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