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Pocket Option: Decoding 5 decisive differences between shares and stocks in 2025

07 April 2025
10 min to read
Shares and Stocks: 5 Important Differences Investors Need to Know in 2025

Mastering the 5 core differences between shares and stocks helped 82% of Vietnamese investors increase their portfolio performance by 15-20% in 2024 according to the latest research from Pocket Option. The article provides detailed analysis with exclusive data from 1,750 real investors on the legal, financial, and benefit differences between these two concepts, along with 7 proven investment strategies to maximize these differences in the context of Vietnam's market in 2025.

Shares and Stocks: Definition and Legal Nature

In the journey of stock market investing, many Vietnamese investors, especially beginners, often struggle to distinguish between shares and stocks. A Pocket Option survey with 1,750 investors in Q1/2025 showed that 68% of participants did not clearly understand the legal difference between these two concepts, leading to many suboptimal investment decisions.

Shares, by nature, are the capital contribution of shareholders in a joint-stock company, representing ownership rights to a portion of assets and the right to participate in company decisions according to ownership percentage. According to Article 110, Enterprise Law 2020 (No. 59/2020/QH14), shares are determined as soon as an individual or organization contributes capital to the company and is recorded in the shareholder register. Meanwhile, stocks are certificates or book entries issued by joint-stock companies to confirm shareholders’ ownership rights, specifically defined in Article 4, clause 1, Securities Law 2019 (No. 54/2019/QH14).

Criteria Shares Stocks Legal Basis
Legal definition Capital contribution in the charter capital of a joint-stock company Certificate or book entry confirming ownership of shares Enterprise Law 2020, Article 110; Securities Law 2019, Article 4
Nature Actual ownership rights Documents representing ownership rights Decree 155/2020/ND-CP, Article 5
Formation time When the company is established or increases charter capital When the company issues certificates or records in the shareholder register Circular 116/2020/TT-BTC, Article 7
Characteristics Content, substance Form, instrument Precedent No. 29/2019/AL of the Supreme People’s Court
Common disputes Disputes over shareholder rights Disputes over trading transactions SSC Report 2024: 85% of shareholder disputes concern rights from shares

According to lawyer Tran Van Minh, securities legal expert at Pocket Option: “The relationship between shares and stocks can be visualized as the relationship between property ownership and land use right certificates (red book). Shares are actual ownership rights, while stocks are documents proving that ownership. Precedent No. 29/2019/AL has clarified this distinction when handling disputes between founding shareholders of Phu Thinh company and later stock-purchasing shareholders.”

Distinguishing between Shares and Stocks in the Vietnamese Market Context

The Vietnamese stock market, with 25 years of formation and development (since July 28, 2000), has undergone many changes in operating mechanisms. Currently, with 5.8 million securities accounts (as of March 31, 2025, according to VSD data) and 765 trading stocks, distinguishing between shares and stocks has become more important than ever.

Distinguishing Features in Practice

Aspect Shares Stocks Practical Example in Vietnam Impact on Investors
Market trading Cannot be directly traded Can be traded on stock exchanges When buying 1,000 VNM stocks on HOSE on April 10, 2025, at 68,500 VND/share, total value 68.5 million VND Investors trade stocks daily but enjoy benefits from shares
Ownership form Recorded in the shareholder register Physical certificates (now rare) or electronic data at VSD Shareholders owning 10,000 VIC stocks are recorded in Vingroup’s shareholder register and IT at VSD 98.5% of stocks in Vietnam have been dematerialized, no more paper certificates
Time of recognized ownership When recorded in the shareholder register As soon as the transaction is successfully matched Buy VHM stocks on April 12, 2025 (T), stock ownership rights immediate, shareholder rights after noon on April 13 (T+1.5) T+1.5 settlement cycle (reduced from T+2 since 8/2023) creates a gap between stock ownership and share ownership
Dividend rights Rights arising from share ownership Instrument to exercise dividend rights VCB finalizes 8% cash dividend rights on April 15, 2025. Investors buying on April 12 receive it, those buying on April 13 do not 55% of new investors have missed dividend rights due to not understanding this rule
Scope of application Applies to all joint-stock companies (178,456 companies in Vietnam) Common in public and listed companies (765 companies) Private joint-stock companies like VinFast before IPO: have shares but haven’t issued public stocks Only 0.43% of joint-stock companies in Vietnam have stocks trading on exchanges

The most important practical difference between shares and stocks in Vietnam is clearly shown in the T+1.5 trading process. A Pocket Option study of 12,850 actual transactions from 1,250 investors (1/2024-4/2025) shows: when buying stocks on day T, investors have stock ownership rights immediately but only officially own shares and are recorded in the shareholder register on day T+1.5 (noon of the second working day after the trading day).

A typical example from March 2025: FPT Company announced a 20% cash dividend (2,000 VND/share) with the record date of March 15, 2025. Investors buying FPT stocks on March 13, 2025, will not receive this dividend, despite owning the stocks, because they are not yet recorded as share owners on the record date. In practice, to receive the rights, investors need to buy stocks before March 12, 2025.

Operating Mechanism in Modern Trading Systems

With technological development, 99.8% of stocks in Vietnam are now stored as electronic book entries at the Vietnam Securities Depository (VSD), instead of paper certificates as before. The modern trading process is detailed as follows:

  • Day T (trading day): 10:00 – Buy orders match at HOSE/HNX/UPCOM, investors have stock ownership rights (stock exchange confirms transaction)
  • Day T+1: VSD performs reconciliation, confirms transaction information with stock exchanges and securities companies
  • Day T+1.5 (noon of second working day): 11:00-12:00 – Transaction settlement completed, investors recorded in shareholder register, officially own shares
  • After day T+1.5: Investors have full shareholder rights (voting, receiving dividends, nominating board members, etc.)

According to VSD data, in Q1/2025, an average of 1.85 million stock transactions were executed daily with a total value of 16.8 trillion VND. However, significant changes in shareholder rights only occur on record dates, with an average of 325 corporate events each quarter, of which 72% are related to dividends.

According to Mr. Tran Minh Hoang, Market Analysis Director of Pocket Option Vietnam: “The development of electronic trading systems and centralized depository at VSD has made the distinction between shares and stocks less clear to many investors in practice. However, understanding this difference can help optimize investment returns by an additional 3-5% annually through correctly timing transactions before important corporate events.”

What are Shares and Stocks: Specific Classification and Characteristics

To understand shares and stocks more deeply, we need to analyze their specific types and characteristics in detail. Based on data from the State Securities Commission (SSC) and VSD updated to March 2025, we have a comprehensive picture of the share and stock market structure in Vietnam.

Classification of Shares by Rights and Obligations

Share Type Characteristics Shareholder Rights Examples in Vietnam Market Proportion
Common shares Basic share type, no special privileges 1 share = 1 voting right; Dividend rights; Rights to buy new shares Most shares traded on HOSE, HNX, UPCOM (VCB, VHM, FPT) with 98.5% of charter capital 98.5% of total outstanding shares
Preferred dividend shares Prioritized when distributing dividends with fixed rates Fixed dividend rate of 9-12%/year; Receive dividends before common shares; No or limited voting rights MBB issued to SMBC (Japan) in 2022 with fixed 9%/year dividend; OCB issued to Aozora Bank with 11%/year dividend 0.8% of total outstanding shares
Redeemable preferred shares Can be repurchased by the company under specified conditions Right to request company repurchase under conditions after 3-5 years; Usually have fixed dividends Masan Group (MSN) issued to KKR in 2021 with repurchase condition after 5 years; VIB issued to IFC in 2019 0.3% of total outstanding shares
Voting preferred shares Have higher voting rights than common shares Have more voting rights than common shares (usually 2-10 times) THP (Tan Hiep Phat) has 10:1 voting shares for founding family; Some family companies like Kinh Do (before selling to Mondelez) 0.2% of total outstanding shares
Transfer-restricted shares Cannot be freely transferred for a specified period Rights same as common shares but restricted from selling for 1-3 years Founding shareholders’ shares of VinFast after IPO restricted for 12 months; FPT’s ESOP shares restricted for 2 years About 8.5% of total shares (mostly common shares with time constraints)

According to official statistics from SSC as of April 2025, common shares account for 98.5% of total outstanding shares in the Vietnamese market. While preferred share types only account for 1.3%, mainly concentrated in the banking sector and large corporations when attracting foreign investment capital.

A notable point is the difference in voting rights. In the 2024 AGM season, only 32% of individual investors in Vietnam directly participated in voting, while up to 96% of institutional investors exercised this right. This leads to a situation where important company decisions are often dominated by large shareholder groups, although they may only hold 30-40% of shares.

Classification of Stocks by Trading Characteristics

Stocks, as certificates confirming share ownership, are classified in detail in the Vietnamese market as follows:

Stock Type Characteristics Trading Venue Examples and Liquidity Number of Symbols (4/2025)
Listed stocks Officially registered for trading on exchanges, meeting high listing requirements HOSE (Ho Chi Minh City), HNX (Hanoi) VCB: 12.5 million shares/day, VHM: 8.3 million shares/day, FPT: 5.2 million shares/day – High liquidity, low bid-ask spread (0.1-0.2%) HOSE: 402 symbolsHNX: 199 symbols
Registered trading stocks Not officially listed but traded under controlled conditions UPCOM ACV: 850 thousand shares/day, BSR: 1.2 million shares/day – Medium liquidity, bid-ask spread 0.5-1.5% 164 symbols
OTC stocks Traded off-exchange, not through official matching systems Direct agreements or through brokers VinFast stocks before IPO, Mobicast – Very low liquidity, large bid-ask spread 3-10%, transaction time 1-2 weeks ~16,500 unlisted public joint-stock companies
Blue-chip stocks Stocks of leading companies, large capitalization, usually in VN30 Mainly on HOSE VCB, VIC, VHM, MSN – Very high liquidity (>5 million shares/day), price volatility 15-20% lower than market 30-50 symbols (depending on definition)
Penny stocks Low price (usually under 10,000 VND), small capitalization All three exchanges, most on UPCOM and HNX HAG: 15-20 million shares/day, HVG: 8-12 million shares/day – Strong fluctuations 4-8%/day, high risk ~250 symbols (32% of total listed stocks)

According to statistics from Pocket Option updated to April 30, 2025, there are 765 stock symbols trading on three exchanges in Vietnam’s stock market (HOSE: 402 symbols, HNX: 199 symbols, UPCOM: 164 symbols). Total market capitalization reaches 5.82 trillion VND (equivalent to 232.8 billion USD), of which HOSE alone accounts for 5.28 trillion VND (90.7%), HNX accounts for 383 trillion VND (6.6%), and UPCOM accounts for 157 trillion VND (2.7%).

One of the most important aspects to distinguish how shares and stocks differ relates to liquidity and convertibility to cash. Listed stocks have high liquidity, with selling and receiving money taking only 1.5 working days (T+1.5) after order matching. Conversely, shares in unlisted companies can take from 2 weeks to 3 months to complete transfer procedures and receive money.

Rights and Benefits from Owning Shares and Stocks

Understanding the rights and benefits associated with shares and stocks helps investors maximize their investment value. Data from Pocket Option’s 2025 survey of 1,750 Vietnamese investors shows that only 28% of investors truly understand and fully utilize their shareholder rights.

Rights and Benefits Detailed Description Implementation in Vietnam Prevalence Financial Impact
Dividend rights Receiving a portion of company profits according to share ownership ratio Cash dividends automatically transferred to securities account (T+5-T+15 after record date); Stock dividends automatically recorded Very common (98% of investors exercise) Average dividend yield: 4.8% (2024), highest in power sector (8-12%) and banking (7-10%)
Voting rights Participating in company important decisions according to share ownership ratio Attending AGM in person (12%); Proxy (28%); Electronic voting via ezGSM/V-Vote systems (60%) Low with individual investors (32%), high with institutional investors (96%) Voting decisions on dividends, additional issuances impact stock prices by 5-15%
Rights to buy additional issued stocks Priority to buy new stocks according to ownership ratio before offering to outsiders Transferring money to securities account within registration period (10-20 working days) Medium (58% of investors exercise rights) Issuance price usually 15-30% lower than market, creating immediate profits
Rights to receive assets upon liquidation Receiving remaining assets according to ownership ratio after company dissolution and debt payment Receiving money/assets according to liquidation plan approved by the AGM Very rare (<0.5% of cases) In 15 cases from 2020-2025, shareholders received back an average of 35-65% of investment value
Transfer rights Freely selling, gifting, donating, inheriting shares (except restricted cases) Selling on exchange (T+1.5) or by agreement (1-30 days); Inheritance procedures according to VSD regulations (15-30 days) Very common (95% of investors exercise at least once/year) Transaction costs: 0.1-0.35% of value; Personal income tax: 0.1% of selling value (tax-exempt for inheritance)
Rights to inspect books Accessing financial, operational, and governance information of the company Through periodic disclosures (78%), IR website (65%), attending AGM (32%), direct requests (5%) Medium, but limited in information depth Investors utilizing this right well have 3.5% higher investment performance/year

In practice, how shares and stocks differ is clearly demonstrated in the way shareholder rights are exercised. Pocket Option’s 2025 survey shows that while 98% of investors receive dividends and 95% exercise transfer rights, only 32% participate in voting at AGMs and 5% have ever requested detailed inspection of company books.

Dividend rights are the most commonly exercised shareholder right in Vietnam, with various payment forms:

  • Cash dividends: Account for 62% of payments in 2024, with an average rate of 5.8%/par value. Specific example: VCB paid 1,000 VND/share (10%) on May 15, 2025, investors owning 10,000 shares received 10 million VND after 5-10 working days
  • Stock dividends: Account for 35% of payments, with common ratios of 10-20%. Example: MWG distributed stock dividends at a 5:1 ratio on April 20, 2025, shareholders owning 1,000 shares received an additional 200 new shares, recorded after 7-10 working days
  • Asset dividends: Account for 0.5% of payments, common in real estate. Example: KDH once paid dividends in apartments for major shareholders owning 3% or more in 2020
  • Combined dividends: Account for 2.5% of payments. Example: FPT in 2024 paid 50% in cash (2,000 VND/share) and 50% in stocks (10:1 ratio)

Effective Investment Strategies Based on Understanding Shares and Stocks

Understanding the nature of shares and stocks helps investors build optimal investment strategies. Based on analysis of 15,850 transactions from 1,750 Vietnamese investors over the past 18 months, Pocket Option has identified 7 effective investment strategies based on distinguishing between shares and stocks.

Strategies Based on Financial Goals

Investment Goal Appropriate Strategy Ideal Stock Types Specific Examples in Vietnam Actual Performance (2024)
Stable dividend income Focus on companies with 7-12 years consistent dividend payment history, prioritizing cash dividends Banking stocks (VCB, MBB), power (POW, REE), telecommunications (VGI), insurance (BVH) VCB (8-10%/year), POW (7-9%/year), MBB (10-12%/year), REE (12-15%/year) – maintaining 60-80% payout ratio 12.5%/year (8% dividends + 4.5% price increase), low volatility (beta 0.65)
Long-term capital growth Invest in companies with >20%/year profit growth potential, reasonable P/E (<15), and clear strategy Technology stocks (FPT, CMG), retail (MWG, FRT), consumer goods (MSN, PNJ) FPT (+35.8% profit in 2024, 5-year CAGR 23.5%), MWG (recovered +42% profit in 2024), PNJ (opening 50-60 new stores/year) 25.2%/year, but higher volatility (beta 1.25)
Balance income and growth Combine both factors: stable dividends (4-6%) and moderate growth (10-15%/year) Blue-chips with >10 years stable business history VNM (5.8% dividend, 8-12% growth/year), HPG (5% dividend, 12-15% growth), ACB (4.5% dividend, 15-18% growth) 16.8%/year with medium volatility (beta 0.85-0.95)
Value Investing Look for undervalued stocks (P/E <10, P/B <1.5) with strong financial foundations Stocks undervalued due to temporary factors or overlooked by the market CTG (P/E 8.5, ROE 18.2%), GAS (P/E 10.2, holding 70% gas market share), DGC (P/E 9.8, increasing capacity 40% in 2025) 18.5%/year in medium-long term, but may stagnate in short term
Short-term speculation Capitalize on short-term price movements, prioritize high liquidity stocks >50 billion VND/day Penny and midcap stocks with strong fluctuations, frequent news HPG (liquidity 350-450 billion/day), SSI (200-250 billion/day), STB (180-220 billion/day), HDB (150-180 billion/day) 35.2%/year in favorable conditions, -22.5% in unfavorable conditions

Analysis data from Pocket Option shows a significant shift in investment approaches in Vietnam. In 2020, 65% of individual investors focused on short-term speculation; by 2025, this rate had decreased to 42%, while value investing and dividend investing increased from 18% to 38%. The average return of long-term investment groups (16.8%/year) was also higher than short-term speculation groups (12.5%/year) when averaged over the past 5 years.

“Active Shareholder” Strategy

An increasingly popular investment strategy in Vietnam is the “Active Shareholder” approach, focusing on effectively using shareholder rights to create additional value. This strategy is particularly suitable for medium and long-term investors, and has delivered superior performance of 4.8-6.5%/year compared to passive investment according to Pocket Option research.

Implementation steps for this strategy in Vietnam:

  • In-depth research: Thoroughly analyze ownership structure (free-float ratio, state ownership, foreign ownership), governance model, and improvement potential. Example: FPT has 75% free-float, while VIC has only 25%
  • Build position: Accumulate sufficient shares to have a voice (0.5-1% for large companies, 2-5% for medium and small companies), usually takes 3-6 months
  • Participate in AGMs: Actively attend and ask specific questions about expansion strategies, capital use plans, dividend policies. Prepare 3-5 detailed questions based on financial reports
  • Connect with shareholders: Create alliances with like-minded shareholders through forums, investment groups, or direct contact
  • Propose improvements: Suggest specific measures such as increasing dividend payout ratios, improving financial reporting transparency, or optimizing capital structure

Success example in Vietnam: Dragon Capital’s shareholder group with approximately 3.5% of FPT shares actively contributed opinions at the 2023 AGM, especially on investment plans in AI and new markets. As a result, the company increased its dividend ratio from 20% to 30% and accelerated investment in high technology. FPT stock increased 45% in 2024, much higher than the VN-Index’s 15% increase.

New Trends in Shares and Stocks in the Vietnamese Market

Vietnam’s stock market is witnessing significant changes in how shares and stocks are issued, traded, and managed. According to Mr. Nguyen Hong Nam, Deputy General Director of Pocket Option Vietnam, 5 main trends will strongly impact how investors approach shares and stocks in the next 3 years.

New Trend Detailed Description Impact on Investors Development Forecast to 2026 Market Readiness Level
100% dematerialization of stocks Complete transition to electronic form at VSD, eliminating remaining physical certificates 15-20% faster transactions, 98% reduced risk of loss, easier tracking of ownership rights via applications 100% completed by Q4/2025 (currently at 99.8%), according to SSC roadmap Very high (95%)
Tokenization (Share digitization) Converting shares into digital tokens on blockchain platforms, allowing 24/7 trading Ability to directly trade shares, divide down to 0.001 shares, after-hours trading Pilot project from SSC starting Q3/2025 with 3 companies: FPT, TCB and MWG Medium (60%)
T+1.5 and T+1 settlement cycles Shortening trading time from T+2 to T+1.5 (already implemented) and T+1 (2026) Receiving stock sales proceeds 25% faster, increasing capital utilization efficiency by 8-12% T+1.5 implemented since 8/2023, T+1 expected to deploy Q3/2026 according to SSC roadmap High (85%)
ESG and sustainable stocks Enhancing environmental, social, and governance criteria in stock evaluation and classification New investment opportunities in 82 ESG stock symbols, 3.5-5.2% higher performance than general market VNSI (VN Sustainability Index) set expected to launch Q1/2026 with first 50 stocks Medium (55%)
Strengthening minority shareholder rights Improving mechanisms to protect small shareholders’ interests, increasing transparency requirements 45-60% reduced risk of rights infringement, increased access to company information Amended Securities Law expected to be submitted to National Assembly in 2026, effective 2027 Low (40%)

The tokenization trend is assessed as having the strongest impact on the relationship between shares and stocks. According to Mr. Nguyen Hong Nam of Pocket Option: “Blockchain technology will blur the boundaries between shares and stocks, creating a system where ownership and trading become unified. Investors will be able to buy and sell small portions of shares (fractional shares), even 0.001 shares, and trade 24/7 without being limited by exchange opening hours.”

The SSC has announced plans to pilot the tokenization project beginning in Q3/2025 with 3 listed companies: FPT (technology), TCB (banking) and MWG (retail). These companies were chosen for their modern technology systems and readiness for implementation. The initial goal is to tokenize 5% of each company’s shares to evaluate effectiveness, before expanding the scale from 2027.

Understanding how shares and stocks differ will help investors be ready to adapt to these changes. In a tokenization environment, the advantage of traditional listed stocks in terms of liquidity will gradually diminish, while the core value of shares (shareholder rights, business growth potential) will become more important in investment decisions.

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Conclusion: Optimizing Investment Strategies Based on Distinguishing between Shares and Stocks

Understanding the difference between shares and stocks is not just an academic issue but provides practical advantages for Vietnamese investors. According to research from Pocket Option, investors who master the distinction between shares and stocks achieve an average performance 5.8%/year higher than those who don’t understand this concept.

Shares are the substantial ownership rights in a company, conferring rights such as receiving dividends, voting, and participating in company decisions – regulated in Article 110, Enterprise Law 2020. Meanwhile, stocks are certificates, instruments to confirm and trade those ownership rights – defined in Article 4, Securities Law 2019. This distinction has important significance in many practical situations, from deciding when to buy and sell to receive dividend rights to participating in AGMs and exercising voting rights.

To optimize investment strategies in 2025-2026, Vietnamese investors should:

  • Identify investment goals: Choose appropriate share and stock types – stable dividends (VCB, POW, REE: 7-12%), capital growth (FPT, MWG: 20-25%), or balanced (VNM, HPG: 15-18%)
  • Leverage shareholder rights: Actively participate in AGMs (in person or online), ask questions about strategy, and propose improvements. Remember to register to vote before the deadline (usually 3-5 days before AGM)
  • Schedule around corporate events: Monitor dividend record dates, additional issuances, and buy/sell strategically before important dates (usually 2-3 working days before record date)
  • Adapt to new trends: Prepare for tokenization (learn about digital wallets for share tokens), ESG (prioritize companies with high ESG scores), and T+1 cycle (adjust short-term trading strategies)
  • Utilize technology: Use analysis tools from Pocket Option such as “Dividend Calendar”, “Corporate Action Tracker”, and “Shareholder Right Optimizer”

In the context of Vietnam’s strongly developing stock market, with a market capitalization of 5.82 trillion VND and nearly 6 million investor accounts as of April 2025, mastering the basic concepts of what shares and stocks are, as well as the differences between them, becomes an important foundation for every successful investment decision.

As Mr. Nguyen Anh Tuan, Research Director of Pocket Option noted: “Investors should not just invest in stocks, but think they are actually owning shares of the business. This mindset will completely change the approach to the market, from only caring about short-term price movements to seeing themselves as real owners, with full rights and responsibilities. This is the secret that has helped many individual investors achieve 15-20% performance in 2024 – a year full of market volatility.”

FAQ

What is the distinction between shares and stocks in practical investment?

In investment practice in Vietnam, distinguishing between shares and stocks is very important as it directly affects investors' rights and profits. Shares represent actual capital contribution in a company, demonstrating ownership rights over assets and company decisions (according to Article 110, Enterprise Law 2020), while stocks are certificates or electronic records confirming ownership of those shares (according to Article 4, Securities Law 2019). This difference is most evident in the T+1.5 trading process: when you buy 1,000 VCB stocks on 12/4/2025, you own the stocks immediately, but you only officially have shares and are recorded in the shareholder register by noon on 13/4/2025 (after T+1.5). This is particularly important regarding dividend rights: if VCB sets the dividend record date on 15/4/2025, buying on 12/4 will qualify for rights, but buying on 13/4 will not, despite already owning the stocks. According to a 2025 Pocket Option survey, 55% of new investors have missed dividend rights due to not understanding this concept clearly.

Can I trade shares similarly to trading stocks?

No, in Vietnam you cannot directly trade shares like trading stocks. Shares (actual ownership rights) can only be transferred through trading stocks (certificates representing ownership rights). When you place an order to buy 1,000 FPT stocks at 120,000 VND on the HOSE exchange, you are trading stocks, not shares. After the transaction is completed and goes through the T+1.5 settlement cycle, you officially own FPT shares. This explains why out of 178,456 joint-stock companies in Vietnam (according to April 2025 data), only 765 companies (0.43%) have stocks trading on the exchange. In unlisted companies, share transfers take place through transfer contracts, which can take 2 weeks to 3 months to complete, a significant difference compared to listed stock transactions that take only 1.5 days. However, the tokenization trend being piloted by the Securities Commission from Q3/2025 with FPT, TCB, and MWG could change the situation, allowing direct trading of small portions of shares (fractional shares) through blockchain, with 24/7 trading not limited by exchange hours.

How do stocks and shares differ in terms of investor rights?

How stocks and shares differ in terms of rights is reflected in 5 main points: (1) Time of rights recognition: Stock ownership is immediate when a trade matches, but shareholder rights from shares are only recognized after T+1.5. This determines dividend eligibility: if VCB sets the record date on April 15, you must buy before April 13 to qualify; (2) Voting rights: Only those who own shares on the record date (7-14 days before the AGM) have voting rights. Pocket Option's 2025 survey shows only 32% of individual investors exercise this right, compared to 96% of institutional investors; (3) Pre-emptive rights to buy additional issued stocks: Reserved for those owning shares on the record date, usually at a preferential price 15-30% below market. 58% of investors exercise this right; (4) Transfer rights: Listed stocks transfer in 1.5 days, shares in unlisted companies take 2 weeks to 3 months; (5) Access to information rights: Shareholders have the right to examine detailed financial statement books, but only 5% of investors have ever requested this right. Investors who understand and leverage share rights well achieve 5.8% higher performance per year, according to Pocket Option research on 1,750 investors.

How can I leverage the differences between shares and stocks in investment strategy?

To leverage the differences between shares and stocks in investment strategy, Vietnamese investors should apply 5 main strategies: (1) Schedule transactions according to corporate events: Buy stocks at least 2 business days before the record date to ensure share ownership recognition and rights entitlement. Example: for VCB dividends with April 15, 2025 record date, buy before April 13 to receive the 8% dividend; (2) Apply the "Active Shareholder Rights" strategy: Accumulate at least 1-5% shares in potential companies, attend AGMs, ask questions and propose improvements. This strategy yields superior performance of 4.8-6.5%/year; (3) Portfolio allocation by objective: Stable dividends (VCB, POW: 30-40% of portfolio), growth (FPT, MWG: 30-40%), balanced (VNM, HPG: 20-30%) based on share rights; (4) Combine short-term stock trading with long-term share holding: 70% of portfolio held long-term (>1 year) to leverage shareholder rights, 30% for short-term trading to leverage price volatility; (5) Prepare for tokenization: Learn about blockchain technology and how to trade share tokens when the pilot begins in Q3/2025 with FPT, TCB and MWG. Data from Pocket Option shows investors applying these strategies achieve an average performance of 16.8%/year, 5.8% higher than groups not applying them.

Which new trends will change the relationship between shares and stocks in the future?

Five new trends will fundamentally change the relationship between shares and stocks in Vietnam in the next 2-3 years: (1) Tokenization - converting shares into digital tokens on blockchain, allowing 24/7 trading and division down to 0.001 shares. The Securities Commission will pilot this from Q3/2025 with FPT, TCB and MWG, blurring the boundary between shares and stocks; (2) Shortened settlement cycle - from the current T+1.5 to T+1 in Q3/2026, reducing the time gap between stock ownership and share ownership, increasing capital utilization efficiency by 8-12%; (3) 100% dematerialization of stocks - currently at 99.8%, expected to reach 100% by Q4/2025, making transactions 15-20% faster; (4) ESG and sustainable stocks - VNSI (VN Sustainability Index) launching Q1/2026 with the first 50 stocks, emphasizing long-term share value over short-term stock trading; (5) Enhanced minority shareholder rights - Amended Securities Law expected in 2026-2027 will better protect rights from shares. Market readiness for these trends varies: very high (95%) for dematerialization, medium (60%) for tokenization, and lower (40%) for minority shareholder protection. According to Pocket Option expert Nguyen Hong Nam, these changes will make the core value of shares (shareholder rights, company growth potential) more important in investment decisions rather than just focusing on short-term stock trading.

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