• 1. What is meant by Securities?

    The shares, bonds, debentures issued by corporate bodies, units issued by mutual funds, or treasury bonds, saving bonds or bonds issued by the Government of Nepal and such other securities specified by Securities Board of Nepal to be transacted or transferable through the stock exchange or the instrument to purchase, sell or exchange such securities.

  • 2. What is Share?
    A Share means a single unit of ownership in a company of the person holding it. It is an indivisible unit of “share capital” of the company. The denominated value of a share is called face value whose market value may differ based on various market factor. For example: Company A’s share capital is Rs. 100,000; the face value of it share is Rs. 100. This means Company A has 1,000 shares in total. If a person holds 100 shares of Company A, then his/her ownership to the income and/or assets (liabilities) of the company is 10% (100/1000).
  • 3. What is Debenture/Bond?

    Debenture/bond is a debt instrument issued by the institution with a condition that the issuing institution shall pay interest at a rate fixed at the time of issuance and the principle at its maturity. The interest may be paid semi-annually or annually. A debenture normally has a face value of Rs. 1,000.

  • 4. What is Stock Exchange?
    Stock exchange is a market where securities are traded. The one and only stock exchange of Nepal is Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE).
  • 5. What is Ordinary Share?

    Ordinary share also known as common share is share of a company having right to vote in company’s meeting. It represents a normal equity ownership of a company. The holders of ordinary shares are entitled to receive proportionate profit of the company (dividend) as decided by the company’s management. The dividend to ordinary shareholders are paid only after payment of preference shareholders.

  • 6. What is Preference Share?

    Preference share means the share of a company having right to receive dividend before payment of ordinary share. Preference shareholders are to be paid before ordinary shareholders if the company enters bankruptcy. Based on terms specified at the time of issuance, preference shareholders are entitled to receive dividend even for year(s) when the company suffers loss.

  • 7. What is primary market of securities?
    Primary market of securities refers to the market where investors can buy the securities directly from the issuing company (through issue manager). In a primary market, investors buy new securities which were never in existence before. In Nepal, this kind of issue is popularly known as Initial Public Offering (IPO). While issuing securities at primary market, the sale proceeds directly goes to the issuing company.
  • 8. What is secondary market of securities?

    Unlike primary market, secondary market is a market where the investors buy securities from another inventors through stock brokers. The sale proceeds of a transaction carried at secondary market goes to the investor selling securities. The transaction in secondary market attracts addition fees and charges like: broker commission, SEBON fees and DP Charge.

  • 9. When the securities bought on IPO can be sold?

    The securities bought at IPO can be sold only after it is listed with stock exchange i.e. NEPSE. After the securities are listed, the investors can sell the securities through stockbrokers.

  • 10. How listed securities can be bought/sold?

    The securities already listed in NEPSE can be bought/sold through stockbrokers. The investor shall update KYC with the broker before being able to buy/sell listed securities.

  • 11. What is meant by book closure?

    Book closure is a time period during which a company will not execute the transfer of shares of the company. The consequence of book closure is that the investor buying share after book closure is not entitled to participate in the meeting of the company, receive dividend (cash or stock) or right share for the year for which book has been closed.