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Can Subchapter S retired stock be un-retired?


Asked by Marsha
Posted: Friday, November 21, 2008  |  Found in Finance & Accounting

More answers by Nina Kaufman
Answer by Nina Kaufman
If you sold your interest in a business back to the corporation and later bought back in, the corporation would simply issue new shares to reflect the new purchase.

In the ideal world, when someone sells his or her shares, they turn the stock certificates representing those shares back to the corporation to be canceled. You wouldn't get the exact same piece of paper (stock certificate) handed back to you. Like getting divorced and remarried to the same person, your new anniversary is the date of the remarriage, not the date of the initial wedding.
Nina L. Kaufman is an award-winning business attorney, author and speaker. For more than 15 years, she has successfully navigated thousands of small businesses through the legal hurdles they face in starting and running their companies. Under her AskTheBusinessLawyer.com brand, she reaches thousands of entrepreneurs and small business owners with her legal services, professional speaking, information products, and LexAppeal weekly ezine.

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