===
Australia === In Australia the
Australian Securities Exchange uses the following conventions: Three character base symbol with the first and third character being alphanumeric and the second alphabetic. ETFs and ETMFs can be either 3 or 4 characters. Exchange-traded warrants and exchange-traded options are six characters. ETOs can have numbers in the sixth character.
Canada In Canada the
Toronto Stock Exchange TSX and the TSXV use the following special codes after the ticker symbol:
United Kingdom In the
United Kingdom, prior to 1996, stock codes were known as EPICs, named after the
London Stock Exchange's
Exchange Price Information Computer (e.g.: "MKS" for
Marks and Spencer). Following the introduction of the
Sequence trading platform in 1996, EPICs were renamed
Tradable Instrument Display Mnemonics (TIDM), but they are still widely referred to as EPICs. Stocks can also be identified using their
SEDOL (Stock Exchange Daily Official List) number or their ISIN (
International Securities Identification Number).
United States In the
United States, modern letter-only ticker symbols were developed by
Standard & Poor's (S&P) to bring a national standard to investing. Previously, a single company could have many ticker symbols as they varied between the dozens of individual stock markets. The term
ticker refers to the noise made by the
ticker tape machines once widely used by stock exchanges. The S&P system was later standardized by the securities industry and modified as the years passed. Stock symbols for
preferred stock have not been standardized. Some companies use a well-known product as their ticker symbol. Belgian brewer
AB InBev, the brewer of
Budweiser beer, uses "BUD" (symbolizing its premier product in the United States) as its three-letter ticker for American Depository Receipts. Its rival, the
Molson Coors Brewing Company, uses a similarly beer-related symbol, "TAP". Likewise,
Southwest Airlines pays tribute to its headquarters at
Love Field in
Dallas through its "LUV" symbol.
Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, which operates large amusement parks in the United States, uses "FUN" as its symbol.
Acushnet Company uses "GOLF," as the company sells products related with golf.
Harley-Davidson uses "HOG", an abbreviation for the corporate-sponsored
Harley Owners Group.
Yamana Gold uses "AUY", because on the
periodic table of elements, "Au" is the symbol for
gold.
Sotheby's, an auction house, previously used the symbol "BID".
Petco uses the symbol "
WOOF," referencing a dog's bark (even though the corporate logo features both a dog and a cat). While most symbols come from the company's name, sometimes it happens the other way around.
Tricon Global, owner of
KFC,
Pizza Hut and
Taco Bell, adopted the symbol "YUM" to represent its corporate mission when the company was spun out of
PepsiCo in 1997. In 2002, the company changed its name to match its symbol, adopting the name
Yum! Brands. Symbols sometimes change to reflect mergers. Before the 1999 merger with
Mobil,
Exxon used a phonetic spelling of the company "XON" as its ticker symbol. The symbol of the firm after the merger was "XOM". After
Hewlett-Packard merged with
Compaq, the new firm took on the ticker symbol "HPQ". (The former symbols were HWP and CPQ.)
AT&T's ticker symbol is "T"; accordingly, the company is referred to simply as "Telephone" on Wall Street (the T symbol is so well known that when SBC purchased the company, it took the AT&T name, capitalizing on its history and keeping the desired single letter symbol). Some examples of US Stock symbols include: • A –
Agilent Technologies • AAPL –
Apple • BRK.(A/B) -
Berkshire Hathaway (Class A or B shares marked by a letter following period, BRK.A or BRK.B) • C –
Citigroup • GOLF -
Acushnet Company • GOOG –
Alphabet (parent company of
Google) • HOG –
Harley-Davidson • HPQ -
Hewlett-Packard • INTC –
Intel • KO –
The Coca-Cola Company • LUV -
Southwest Airlines (after their main hub at
Love Field) • MMM –
3M (originally known as Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing) • MSFT –
Microsoft • T -
AT&T • TGT –
Target Corporation • TXN –
Texas Instruments • XOM -
ExxonMobil • WOOF -
Petco • WMT –
Walmart • ZEUS -
Olympic Steel Formerly, a glance at a U.S. stock symbol and its appended codes would allow an investor to determine where a stock trades; however, in July 2007, the SEC approved a rule change allowing companies moving from the New York Stock Exchange to the Nasdaq to retain their three-letter symbols;
DirecTV was one of the first companies to make this move. When first implemented, the rule change did not apply to companies with one or two-letter symbols, but subsequently any stock was able to move from the NYSE to the Nasdaq without changing its symbol.
CA Technologies, which traded under the symbol CA before it was acquired by
Broadcom Inc. in 2018, moved from the NYSE to the Nasdaq in April 2008 and kept its two-letter symbol.
Single-letter NYSE ticker symbols • A:
Agilent Technologies (previously used by
Anaconda Copper, American Medical Buildings, Attwoods, and
Astra AB) • B:
Barrick Mining Corporation (previously used by
Barnes Group, Bankers Utilities Corporation, and
Baldwin Lima Hamilton) • C:
Citigroup (previously used by
Chrysler (previously used by Liberty Financial Companies, Sinclair Oil Corp, and
Liberty Media (previously used by
Pandora and
Phillips Petroleum Company) • Q:
Qnity Electronics (previously used by
Quintiles and
Qwest) • R:
Ryder (previously used by
Uniroyal and
LF Rothschild) • S:
SentinelOne (previously used by
Sprint Corporation and
Sears) • T:
AT&T (previously used by
AT&T Corporation) • U:
Unity Software (previously used by
US Airways) • V:
Visa (previously used by
Vivendi,
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad,
Irving Bank, Vivra, and Viking General) • W:
Wayfair (previously used by
Westvaco) Unassigned letters: • I: previously used by
Intelsat, Itel Corporation, and
First Interstate Bancorp • K: previously used by
Kellanova until acquisition by
Mars, Inc. on December 11, 2025. • N: previously used by
Inco and
NetSuite • X: previously used by
US Steel until its 2025 acquisition by
Nippon Steel (TYO: 5401) • Y: previously used by
Alleghany Corporation • Z: previously used by
Woolworth Corporation Single-letter NASDAQ ticker symbols • Z:
Zillow Unassigned letters: • A–Y
Other countries In countries where
Arabic script is used, and in
East Asia, transliterated
Latin script versions of company names may be confusing to an unpracticed Western reader; stock symbols provide a simple means of clear communication in the workplace. Many Asian countries use numerical or alphanumerical ticker symbols of only digits and Roman letters to facilitate international trade. •
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China – 601398 [Shanghai], 1398 [Hong Kong] •
HSBC – 00005 [Hong Kong], HSBC [New York], HSBA [London] •
DBS Bank – D05 [Singapore] •
Jardine Cycle & Carriage – C07 [Singapore] •
Eneos Holdings – 5020 [Tokyo & Nagoya – Japan] •
Toshiba – 6502 [Tokyo – Japan] (formerly, until
went private in 2023 by
Japan Industrial Partners) •
China CITIC Bank Ltd – 601998 [Shanghai – China] • – 000615 [Shenzhen – China] •
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing – 2330 [Taiwan] , TSM [New York] •
Asus – 2357 [Taiwan] •
Chunghwa Telecom – 2412 [Taiwan], CHT [New York] •
Saudi Electricity Company - 5110 [Saudi Arabia] ==See also==