Any state is an enterprise. He has his own accounting department (Ministry of Finance), he has his own security service (MIA, FSB), he has his own general director (president), his deputy (prime minister), his deputies (vice prime ministers), there are department heads ( ministers), there are local officials (governors), there are just employees (we are with you). But the enterprise is joint-stock, divided into shares, these shares were distributed to us during privatization. These are shares, we are all shareholders of this company. Shares in the concept of the state - is its currency.
Our company, like most others, is commercial, i.e. exists for the sake of making money for themselves and their shareholders. To earn money, the company must work to produce a product. In our company, the main product is oil, we are one of the largest oil exporters in the world. We sell oil for the shares of another company - the United States. Their shares are interesting because they are in demand everywhere and at all, they can be exchanged for anything, anytime and anywhere. Yes, and they are provided better than anyone.
All stocks are traded on world exchanges. The value of the stock is determined by the success of the enterprise. And the success of an enterprise is determined by its profit. And then at one fine moment, when the cost of our products dropped from $ 147 to $ 50, it is obvious that the income of our company will be reduced. And that means that the value of our shares on the market has plummeted. Nobody needs shares of a loss-making or low-profit enterprise. In my opinion, this is obvious. But the management of the company is trying to keep up the high cost of shares by buying them, i.e. artificially creating increased demand. Buying up happens for US stocks that are held by the management in limited quantities and will end sooner or later. And when they run out, our shares with you will be alone with the world market, and then the market will appreciate them.
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Hi buck 40 rubles! ;)