---
title: "What Do Stock Market Symbols Mean?"
description: "What do stock symbols mean? They're shorthand ways to refer to shares of a company's stock. Some of them have interesting histories and meanings."
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-do-stock-market-symbols-mean
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/what-do-stock-market-symbols-mean.md
published: 2013-02-16
last_updated: 2017-06-17
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# What Do Stock Market Symbols Mean?

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-do-stock-market-symbols-mean
Updated: 2017-06-17
If you spend much time looking at stocks, you know that every stock has a
short abbreviation. You may be familiar with stocks such as [KO](/stocks/KO/view) ([Coca Cola](http://www.coca-cola.com/)) or [FB](/stocks/FB/view) ([Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/)). You may know the symbols of the
stocks you personally own. You may not know the history behind stock symbols in
general, or the symbols of the stocks you own.

In the 19th century, Thomas Edison invented a machine to transmit stock
price information across the country: the stock ticker tape machine. Like the
telegraph and Morse code, the stock ticker machine used a shorthand to refer to
stocks and prices. US Steel, for example, was referred to by the single letter
"X". This is the historical and practical definition of a *stock
symbol*.

## How Do Companies Choose Their Stock Symbols?

When a company decides to go public in an [IPO](/how-to-invest/happily-ignoring-ipos), it chooses a stock
exchange where people will trade its shares (the [NYSE](https://www.nyse.com/index) or the [NASDAQ](http://www.nasdaq.com/) are two popular choices), and then it
chooses its symbol. The symbol is a unique set of three or four characters with
some meaning.

A symbol usually has some relationship with the name of the company, like [CY](/stocks/CY/view) for Cypress Semiconductor or [XRX](/stocks/XRX/view) for Xerox. Other times, it reinforces a
marketing image of the company. For example, the company which owns Pizza Hut,
KFC, and Taco Bell changed its name to [YUM! Brands](http://www.yum.com/) and its stock market symbol to [YUM](/stocks/YUM/view) in
the early 2000s.

To get a short, memorable symbol a company has to be huge. Your uncle
Ermine's Canadian corporation filing for its $2 million IPO won't get a one- or
two-letter stock symbol. Consider this example. What company uses the stock
ticker symbol [F](/stocks/F/view)? That's the [Ford Motor Company](http://www.ford.com/): an enormous company with a
lengthy history.

## Classes of Ticker and Stock Symbols

One stock may have different symbols; a stock class is a differentiation
between different ownership models of the same company. For example, the Warren
Buffett-led [Berkshire-Hathaway](http://berkshirehathaway.com/) has
two classes of stocks, [BRK.A](/stocks/BRKA/view) </a> and [BRK.B](/stocks/BRKB/view). The former is many times more expensive
than the latter; the company created a second class of stock—the B
class—when the share price of the former rose out of reach of the average
investor. This strategy allowed more investors to own smaller pieces of the
company without splitting *every* share of the main stock—the
class A stock.

Other classification schemes divide all of the stock into multiple groups,
each of which has specific rights. Holders of [Google](/stocks/GOOG/view) [preferred stock](http://www.wikinvest.com/metric/Preferred_Stock) have
the right to vote on corporate actions, where the average Google shareholder
has no say. Other preferred stocks may get larger dividends than their common
stocks or may be paid out first in case of liquidation, merger, spinoff, or
other financial events.

## Market Symbols For Non-Stocks

Stock brokers often trade things that aren't stocks. For example, you may
hold mutual funds, invest in real estate through REITs, or [exchange-traded funds](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/should-you-invest-in-etfs). A popular ETF is
the Vanguard [S&P 500 index fund](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund) called
VFINX. You can buy and sell this as through your broker as if it were a stock,
even though it represents the value of 500 individual stocks. There are index
funds and ETFs for everything from the Dow Jones Industrial Average to gold and
silver and oil and other commodities, foreign currency, bonds, emerging market
stocks, and more.

## Should You Learn Stock Symbols?

Knowing the symbols of the stocks you own or might like to own will help you
read investment information and keep track of prices. After almost 150 years of
ticker symbols, there's plenty of inertia in how stock markets, brokerages, and
investors refer to stocks and trades. Even something as simple as a daily
newspaper listing of stock prices uses stock symbols. Your [stock broker or brokerage site](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker) uses
stock symbols.

Furthermore, when discussing stocks with other people or reading analysis
online, you'll often see people use symbols as shorthand. You don't have to
memorize every symbol on an exchange, but knowing that *NYSE:XOM* refers
to a stock on the New York Stock Exchange referred to as [XOM](/stocks/XOM/view) will help you understand what [Exxon Mobil](https://www.exxon.com/en) is doing in the market.

Here, as usual, [value investors](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-value-investing) have
an advantage. You don't have to track down lots of stocks. You don't have to
memorize lots of symbols. A [good index fund](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-an-index-fund)
and a couple of individual stocks can make a strong portfolio, and [you don't have to trade often](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/how-does-portfolio-churning-affect-your-returns).

Understanding the classes of the stocks you own (or, especially, the classes
of ETFs and index funds) will make a difference to your investments, but it's
more important to spend your research time knowing [what makes a business worth investing in](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/earnings-matter-most) than
memorizing trivia you can trivially look up.
