Let's look again at our Company XYZ. We know from the previous example that the company has 1,000 authorized shares. If it offered 300 shares in an IPO, gave 150 to the executives, and retained 550 in the treasury, the number of shares outstanding would be 450 shares or 300 float shares + 150 restricted shares.
Following are the formulas you can use to calculate the shares outstanding of a firm: Shares outstanding = Floating stock + Restricted shares. Shares outstanding = Shares issued - Shares repurchased. Shares outstanding = Authorised shares - Treasury stock.
A publicly traded company's total number of shares outstanding can usually be found on their investor relations webpage, on stock exchanges' websites, or in the shareholder's equity section on a company's balance sheet as filed with an authorized information service like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Key Stock Data P/E Ratio (TTM) 46.92(01/10/25) EPS (TTM) $4.67. Market Cap. $2.30 T. Shares Outstanding. 10.52 B. Public Float. 9.39 B. Yield. AMZN is not currently paying a regular dividend. Latest Dividend. N/A. Ex-Dividend Date. N/A.
You receive 100 RSUs set for distribution over four years (25 shares each year). Each share is worth $100, so the total value is roughly $10,000. After the first year, you have 25 vested shares, then 25 more shares the next year, and so on.
The formula for calculating the shares outstanding consists of subtracting the shares repurchased from the total shares issued to date.