Shares are said to be trading cum-rights as long as buyers will be entitled to a forthcoming rights issue.... more on: Cum-rights
A share is described so when a purchaser is entitled to receive the current rights in the proportion declared by the company.
"With" the right to buy a future issue of shares in a company's stock. The number of shares a cum-rights stockholder can buy is directly proportional to the number of shares that stockholder already owns. This right usually must be exercised during a relatively brief time period. See also ex-rights.
The literal translation is "with rights"--that is, during a rights offering, the period in which the purchaser of stock will receive the rights. The rights entitle the purchaser to buy a fixed amount of shares of stock that has not yet been issued. The prospectus that accompanies a rights distribution states when the rights become ex-rights (without rights). On the ex-right date, a purchaser will not receive the rights. See: Ex-Rights; Prospectus; Subscription Right
With right: During a rights offering, the time period during which the purchaser of stock will receive the rights.
The share is described as cum-rights when a purchaser is entitled to receive the current rights.
A term applied to a stock trading in the marketplace "with subscription rights attached" and reflected in the price of that security.