Cheque Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cheque stocks.

Cheque Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 4 AXP Why Warren Buffett's billions in cash at Berkshire Hathaway is a bearish stock market signal
May 4 AXP Warren Buffett's Confidence In Apple Wanes? Berkshire Cuts Stake By 18% Amid Tech Giant's Troubles.
May 4 AXP 14 Best Financial Sector Dividend Stocks To Invest In
May 4 AXP Berkshire Hathaway's Q1 Operating Earnings Surged 39% — Here's Why
May 3 AXP Big Money Buying Up American Express Shares
May 3 AXP Warren Buffett's Berkshire To Rake In $226M Passively In A Jiffy, Thanks To Its Core Holding Apple
May 3 AXP American Express (AXP) Boasts Earnings & Price Momentum: Should You Buy?
May 3 AXP Here's Why We Think American Express (NYSE:AXP) Is Well Worth Watching
May 2 AXP American Express Stock (NYSE:AXP): Strong Earnings Strengthen the Bull Case
May 1 USIO Usio’s Card Issuing Platform Enables MOBILEMONEY’S Innovative Reverse ATM Kiosks to Issue Hundreds of Thousands of Cards at Cashless Venues and Events
Apr 30 AXP These Companies Recently Hiked Their Dividends - But Is It Enough?
Apr 30 AXP 2 Dow Jones Dividend Stocks That Still Look Like Bargains
Apr 29 OZKAP Hancock Whitney (HWC) Hikes Quarterly Cash Dividend by 33.3%
Apr 29 AXP American Express Partners With F1 Academy Driver Jessica Edgar to Champion Women in Motorsports
Apr 29 AXP American Express Can Sustain Its Rally
Apr 29 AXP 3 Magnificent Growth ETFs Every Investor Under 40 Should Own
Apr 29 AXP Can This Top Warren Buffett Stock Become a Trillion-Dollar Company by 2050?
Apr 29 AXP Prediction: This Will Be Warren Buffett's Second Biggest Holding After Apple by 2027
Apr 29 AXP Meet the 8 Phenomenal Stocks Warren Buffett Plans to Hold Forever
Cheque

A cheque, or check (American English; see spelling differences), is a document that orders a bank to pay a specific amount of money from a person's account to the person in whose name the cheque has been issued. The person writing the cheque, known as the drawer, has a transaction banking account (often called a current, cheque, chequing or checking account) where their money is held. The drawer writes the various details including the monetary amount, date, and a payee on the cheque, and signs it, ordering their bank, known as the drawee, to pay that person or company the amount of money stated.
Cheques are a type of bill of exchange and were developed as a way to make payments without the need to carry large amounts of money. Paper money evolved from promissory notes, another form of negotiable instrument similar to cheques in that they were originally a written order to pay the given amount to whoever had it in their possession (the "bearer").
A cheque is a negotiable instrument instructing a financial institution to pay a specific amount of a specific currency from a specified transactional account held in the drawer's name with that institution. Both the drawer and payee may be natural persons or legal entities. Cheques are order instruments, and are not in general payable simply to the bearer as bearer instruments are, but must be paid to the payee. In some countries, such as the US, the payee may endorse the cheque, allowing them to specify a third party to whom it should be paid.
Although forms of cheques have been in use since ancient times and at least since the 9th century, it was during the 20th century that cheques became a highly popular non-cash method for making payments and the usage of cheques peaked. By the second half of the 20th century, as cheque processing became automated, billions of cheques were issued annually; these volumes peaked in or around the early 1990s. Since then cheque usage has fallen, being partly replaced by electronic payment systems. In an increasing number of countries cheques have either become a marginal payment system or have been completely phased out.

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