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(b) Map the general Wells Fargo & Co share class level equity instrument as well as a specific Wells Fargo & Co exchange-specific share (e.g., issued on the New York Stock Exchange) to FIBO and create example individuals (see https://spec.edmcouncil.org/fibo/ontology/SEC/Equities/EquitiesExampleIndividuals) manually to make sure that we can do so and that all of the relationships work as intended.  These examples only represent what is available publicly in OpenFIGI, not everything one would want to know about a given equity that could be published as instrument master data.  Run two reasoners to make sure that the resulting examples are logically consistent.  Note that the equity examples include details for a number shares on the Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange.

(c) Automate generation of the remaining individuals extracted from OpenFIGI based on these hand-crafted individuals to demonstrate the feasibility of doing so.  

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3. How would a user represent multiple classes of share for the same company? For this, we will need to represent another company, for example, have modeled the shares for Alphabet / Google.

The multi-class share structure at Google came about as a result of the company's restructuring into Alphabet Inc. in October 2015 (NASDAQ: GOOG). Founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page found themselves owning less than majority ownership of the company's stock, but wished to maintain control over major business decisions. The company created three share classes of the company's stock as a result. Class-A shares are held by regular investors and carry one vote per share. Class-B shares, held primarily by Brin and Page, have 10 votes per share. Class-C shares are typically held by employees and have no voting rights. The structure gives most voting control to the founders, although similar setups have proven unpopular with average shareholders in the past.

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The examples cover the Class A and Class C shares only, not Class B, which are not available on the Nasdaq.

4. How would a user map the market data currently published by the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq for the common stock issued by a given issuer?

35. How would a user map the top 20-30 characteristics that banks typically track internally for the common stock issued by a given issuer?

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