>>359629
>jewtendo, Crapcom, Sega and Bandai-Namco ALL receive money from Black Rock, and thus, are marxist companies
<Links don't state this AT ALL
<It's just archives of company shareholders and the amount of shares they own
Since there some people here who have
ZERO knowledge of how the stock market works, let me give you a crash course of what we're looking at and why this Anon is an idiot. To begin,
companies do not make any money off of their own stock. That is not how shares work. A company "share" that you buy on the stock market gives you a fractional/percentage "ownership" of that company. The higher the price of the share is, or the larger amount of shares that exist in the wild, the more "valuable" a company is seen as (With lower price/less shares meaning the less valuable a company is). However, again,
companies do not make any actual money from that stock price. All it is is just a detemrination of the company's "value" in the marketplace.
That being said, it needs to be understood that BlackRock (And Vanguard) holding shares in a company
does not actually make that company any money. At the very "most" all it does is makes those companies "subserviant" to them.
HOWEVER, this is not a right that's exclusive to BlackRock/Vangaurd. Owning shares of a company is something
anyone can participate in. Just go to your local bank or credit union, ask to open a brokerage account, and you can start doing the same thing within the span of a week. And with being a shareholder in a company, you are now entitled to some benefits. The first is that you can participate in activies such as earning calls and board elections. What this means is that you can interogate the current heads of the company about their tactics when it comes to making money
AND even have the ability to elect/fire current board members. Another benefit is that some (Not all) companies pay out dividends (A percentage of their annual revenue that you receive in proportion to the amount of shares that you own).
Now, with that being said, does that mean that BlackRock/Vangaurd are "completely" powerless (Outside of what I just layed out)?
Not entirely. Because BlackRock/Vanguard own such a large amount of shares of these companies, they have a (Limited) ability to effect the company's stock price. They can sell all their shares, send the company's stock price plummeting, and attempt to ruin the company's "value".
However that would only be a temporary measure. Companies like Kadokawa and Nintendo are so strong in the marketplace that a sudden drop in their stock like that would only be seen as a political move or a scare tactic, and the stock would return to it's "proper" place in rather short order. In fact, this isn't that a uncommon move as some investment firms actually pull this regularly to "clear out the rabble" that invest emotionally and gain some more shares than they previously owned.
Again,
this does not make the actual company, who's stock is being traded, any actual money. All it does is effect their "image"/"value" in the stock market. That is it.
TL;DR
Anon is an idiot that doesn't know how stocks work.