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James Emanuel's avatar

I've had lots of DM's on this post, which I welcome, but feel that comments posted here are better as they benefit others. From those conversations, I would like to share one of my responses which I believe helped someone else better understand how this works.

At law, a beneficiary of a trust has what is known as an "equitable interest". He can't make decisions as to capital allocation (same as in a company), but he benefits when the trustee (or CEO in our case) manages capital well.

This is why the stock market is described as an equity market. You are buying equity - a beneficial interest in the company - but not fractional ownership of the company - that nuance is important.

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Financial Underdog's avatar

Thanks James. This was interesting and I like reading things like this that challenge prevailing (and certainly my own) understanding.

I guess I still feel like I benefit from the ‘placebo’ effect of ownership. It helps put me in the right frame of mind before buying a stock. I have even gone through mental exercises where I’ve imagined I was the sole owner of the company, and used that to help me decide whether I’d like to own a ‘share’ of the company. I certainly don’t disagree with your technical and legal arguments but do you agree that there could still be a placebo benefit of thinking in terms of ownership? I suppose one of the other comments kind of touches on this too

Thanks again for the read

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