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What does CA stand for on stocks that traders need to know
When you access a stock trading platform and frequently see strange symbols appended to stock names, right? Such as CA, XD, T2, NC and many others. But do you know what these symbols actually mean? And why is it important for you to understand them deeply? These symbols can potentially change your rights and benefits.
Basic Knowledge: CA stands for Corporate Action
CA stands for Corporate Action, which means “a company’s action.” It indicates that an important event is about to happen within 7 days for that stock. The CA symbol appearing on your stock shows that the company is undergoing some change, such as dividends, additional share issuance, or stock reclassification.
You can click to see details about what CA means. The symbols are divided into three main groups, each with different meanings and impacts.
Category 1: X family symbols (Excluding - No Rights)
Symbols starting with the letter X mean “the buyer of the stock on that day will not receive certain rights.” There are several formats:
XD - Excluding Dividend (No Dividend)
This is the most common. If you buy the stock on the date marked XD, you will not receive the dividend for this round, even if you own the stock. However, if you hold the stock until the next dividend round, you will receive the normal dividend.
Common questions:
XM - Excluding Meetings (No Shareholders’ Meeting Rights)
Stocks marked with XM mean you will not participate in the next shareholders’ meeting, where important company decisions are made.
XW - Excluding Warrant (No Warrant Purchase Rights)
A Warrant is a derivative issued alongside capital increase. If the stock is marked XW, it means you do not have the right to subscribe for this Warrant.
XR - Excluding Rights (No Rights to Subscribe for New Shares)
When a company raises capital to expand, there are rights issued to existing shareholders. Stocks marked XR indicate you missed out on this right.
XS, XT, XI, XP, XA, XE, XN, XB
Other symbols in the X category cover various rights, such as short-term shares (XS), warrants (XT), interest (XI), principal (XP), and many other privileges that buyers on the X date will not receive.
Category 2: T family symbols (Gambling Warning)
A T symbol indicates that the stock price has surged rapidly, prompting the stock exchange to implement measures to limit excessive profit.
T1 - Trading Alert Level 1
Stocks must be bought from a Cash Balance account only (). The T1 period lasts 3 weeks.
T2 - Trading Alert Level 2
If the stock still meets risk criteria after T1, it moves to T2, which requires using only a Cash Balance account and prohibits using the stock as collateral for loans.
T3 - Trading Alert Level 3
The highest level. If T2 still meets risk criteria, T3 requires using only a Cash Balance account, prohibits collateral, and prohibits offsetting (making payments on the same day). This means you must settle payments daily; otherwise, you must wait another day.
Category 3: Risk Warning Symbols
H - Trading Halt (Temporary Trading Suspension)
When news is released but the company has not yet notified the stock exchange, trading is halted for one session.
SP - Trading Suspension (Extended Trading Halt)
Similar to H but more severe, such as not submitting financial statements.
NP - Notice Pending (Awaiting Notification)
The company must notify the stock exchange of important information. Once notified, the status changes to NR (Notice Received).
NC - Non-Compliance (Non-Compliance)
The company may face delisting, such as accumulated losses or long-term failure to submit financial statements. They have 1 year to rectify.
ST - Stabilization (Price Stabilization)
The company issues an IPO exceeding the limit to stabilize the price, usually within the first 30 days.
C - Caution (Warning)
The company faces serious financial problems, such as shareholders’ equity below 50% of capital or a court-approved rehabilitation petition. It serves as a warning for investors to be cautious.
What you should remember
CA means the symbol indicates that a Corporate Action is happening. The letters following CA (such as D, M, W) specify what kind of action it is.
Understanding these symbols is not difficult. Just by recognizing the first letter, you can grasp the nature of the event. The letter X indicates no rights, T indicates risk, and other letters serve as warnings of issues.
So next time you see strange symbols on your stocks, don’t be confused. Just remember that CA stands for Corporate Action, and the subsequent letters specify the details. You’ll have a good idea of what’s happening.