Title: The Statement of Stockholders
1The Statement of Stockholders Equity
2Statement of Shareholders Equity
- Documents changes in balance sheet equity
accounts from one accounting period to the next - Provides an important link between the balance
sheet and the income statement - Company may report info in note or supplementary
schedule rather than formal statement if
desired.(many do!)
3Statement of S/E
- In a nutshell, it simply explains how each
account got from the balance at the beginning of
the period to the balance at the end of the
period and describes events that caused the
balances to change - Federal Express Statement of Changes in
Stockholders' Equity
4Retained Earnings
- Changes in R/E account are primarily result of
net income/loss and dividends - Balance can also be affected by prior period
adjustments and some changes in accounting
principles - Changes in R/E are watched by analysts and the
details on what caused the changes are documented
in the Statement of Stockholders Equity
5Ownership of a Corporation
- Owners of common stock generally receive the
following rights - Voting (in person or by proxy).
- Distributions of profits (in the form of
Dividends). - Distributions of assets in a liquidation.
- Offers to purchase shares of a new stock issue
(pro rata basis).
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7Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Capital Stock
Authorized Shares
The maximum number of shares of capital stock
that can be sold to the public is called the
authorized number of shares.
8Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Capital Stock
Authorized Shares
Issued shares have been sold.
Unissued shares have never been sold.
9Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Capital Stock
Authorized Shares
owned by stockholders.
Outstanding Shares
Unissued Shares
Issued Shares
10Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Capital Stock
Authorized Shares
owned by stockholders.
Outstanding Shares
Unissued Shares
Issued Shares
Treasury Shares
reacquired by the corporation.
11Sale and Issuance of Capital Stock
- An initial public offering (IPO) is the very
first time a corporation sells stock to the
public. - SEC's IPO Information
12Common Stock
- Basic voting stock of the corporation
- Ranks after preferred stock for dividend and
liquidation distribution. - Dividend rates are determined by the board of
directors based on the corporations
profitability and other factors.
13Par Value and No-par Value Stock
- Par value
- Is a nominal value per share of capital stock
specified in the charter. - Has no relationship to market value.
- Serves as the basis for legal capital.
- Legal capital is the amount of capital, required
by the state, that must remain invested in the
business. - It serves as a cushion for creditors.
14Par Value and No-par Value Stock
- No-par value is capital stock that does not have
an amount per share specified in the charter. - When no-par stock is issued by a corporation, the
amount of legal capital is defined by the state. - Stated value is an amount per share that is
specified by the corporation when it issues
no-par stock.
15Preferred Stock
- Has dividend and liquidation preference over
common stock. - Cumulative preferred stock has a preference for
all past dividends over any paid to common
shareholders. - Generally does not have voting rights.
- Usually has a par or stated value.
- Usually has a fixed dividend rate that is stated
as a percentage of the par value.
16Special Features of Preferred Stock
- Convertible preferred stock may be exchanged for
common stock. (Its up to the stockholder to
decide.) - Callable preferred stock may be repurchased by
the corporation at a predetermined price. (Its - the companys choice.)
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18Accounting for Capital Stock Transactions
- Two primary sources of stockholders equity
- Contributed capital
- Par or stated value of issued stock.
- Additional paid-in capital in excess of par or
stated value. - Retained earnings
- The cumulative net income earned by the
corporation less the cumulative dividends
declared by the corporation.
19Accounting for the Issue of Common Stock
- When stock is issued, the equity account Common
Stock is credited (increased) for the par or
stated value of the stock. - If the stock sold for more than par, the
additional amount is credited (increased) to the
equity account Paid in Capital in Excess of Par,
Common Stock.
20Treasury Stock
- A corporations own stock that had been issued
but was subsequently reacquired and is still
being held by that corporation. - Why would a corporation reacquire its own stock?
- To reduce the shares outstanding.
- Because the market price is low.
- To increase earnings per share, if shares wont
be reissued soon. - To use in employee stock option programs.
21Treasury Stock
- is considered issued stock but not outstanding
stock. - has no voting or dividend rights.
- is a contra equity account.
- reduces total stockholders equity on the Balance
Sheet.
22Accounting for Cash Dividends
- Dividends must be declared by the board of
directors before they can be paid. - The corporation is not legally required to
declare (and subsequently pay) dividends. - Once a cash dividend is declared, a liability
(Dividends Payable) is created. - Cash dividends require sufficient cash and
retained earnings, but NOT necessarily Net
Income in the current year, to cover the
dividend.
23Dividend Dates
- Date of declaration
- Date of record
- Date of actual payment to shareholders
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24Some interesting side trips
- Dividend calendar McGraw Hill
- Dividends are not always straightforward
- Dividend advice
- DRIPs
25Dividends on Preferred Stock
- Current preferred dividends must be paid before
paying any dividends to common stock. - If a preferred dividend is not paid, the unpaid
amount is either cumulative (a dividend in
arrears) or noncumulative. - Cumulative Unpaid dividends must be paid before
common dividends. - Noncumulative Unpaid dividends are lost.
26Calculating Preferred and Common Dividends
- ABC Co. has 10 shares of 100 par, 6 cumulative
preferred stock outstanding. Assume that NO
dividends were paid in 19X1. - At the end of 19X2, the Board of Directors
declares a total of 200 worth of dividends for
its preferred and common shareholders. - How much will go to the preferred shareholders?
27Preferred Shareholders get their dividends first
- Cumulative means that the preferred shareholders
get all the past dividends that they were not
paid (called dividends in arrears which must be
footnoted, but NOT reported as a liability on the
balance sheet) before common stockholders can
receive a dividend. - 10 preferred shares x 100 par x .06 60/year
- They get a total of 120 60 for 19X1 dividends
in arrears and 60 for 19X2 current year
dividend. - Common shareholders get the remaining 80.
(80/30 shares outstanding2.67 per share.)
31 shares issued - 1 still in Treasury 30
shares outstanding.
28Cash Dividends
- Whats needed to pay cash dividends?
- retained earnings
- cash (but, could borrow cash to pay dividend)
- no restrictions from outsiders
- Effects of cash dividends on financial statements
- decreases Assets (when they are actually paid)
and Retained Earnings (dividends). - NO EFFECT on Net Income.
29Accounting for Stock Dividends
- Stock dividends are distributions to stockholders
of additional shares of stock, NOT CASH! - Why issue a stock dividend?
- Low on cash (but want to reward stockholders)
- To decrease market price of stock. Why?
- To increase number of stockholders (assuming
some of the newly issued stock will be sold).
30Accounting for Stock Dividends
- All stockholders receive the same percentage
increase in the number of shares they own (pro
rata basis). - No change in total stockholders equity.
- No change in par values.
- Effect on financial statements?
31Retained Earnings
- Appropriating (or Restricting) Retained Earnings
- Board of Directors can restrict (imposed by
outsiders) or appropriate (companys choice)
portions of retained earnings. - It is a way of communicating why more dividends
are not being paid. - Does NOT change TOTAL Ret. Earnings.
- An appropriation (or restriction) only
separates the retained earnings into two
categories, unappropriated and appropriated.
(Must have Unappropriated or Unrestricted R.E. to
declare dividends.)
32Accounting for Stock Splits
- Distributions of 100 or more of stock to
stockholders. - Decreases par value per share of stock, but total
par value stays the same. - Increases number of outstanding shares.
- No change in total stockholders equity.
33Stock Split example
- XYZ Co. has 1000 shares outstanding. Each
share has a 10 par value, but is selling on the
NYSE for 80 per share. - The Company declares a 4 for 1 stock split.
- Complete the following
- Before After
- shares outstanding
- Par value per share
- Total par value
- Total stock market value
- Market value per share
-
1,000 10 10,000 80,000
80
4,000 2.50 10,000 80,000 20
34Stock Split example continued
- XYZ Co. has 1000 shares outstanding. Each
share has a 10 par value, but is selling on the
NYSE for 80 per share. - The Company declares a 4 for 1 stock split.
- Ms. Smith owned 100 shares before the split.
- Complete the following for Ms. Smiths stock
- Before After
- shares owned...
- Total company shares...
- of stock owned...
- Total market value of
- Ms. Smiths stock.
-
100 1,000 10 8,000
400 4,000 10 8,000
Remember, the stock price dropped from 80 to 20
per share.
35Retained Earnings
- Represents the net income that has been earned
less dividends that have been declared since the
first day of operations for the company.
Example (amounts assumed)
Balance January 1, 20X1 500,000 Net
income for 20X1 30,000 - Dividends
for 20X1 Cash dividends (10,000)
Stock dividends ( 5,000) Balance
January 31, 20X1 515,000
36Retained Earnings
- What affects Retained Earnings?
- net income (through closing entries)
- cash dividends
- stock dividends
- prior period adjustments
- Accounting ERRORS made in previous years that are
being corrected now.
37The End