Stockholders Equity
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 1
Explain the advantages and disadvantages of a corporation.
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Characteristics of a Corporation
nSeparate legal entity nContinuous life and transferability
of ownership nLimited liability nSeparation of ownership and management nCorporate taxation nGovernment regulation
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Advantages of a Corporation
1. Can raise more capital than a proprietorship or partnership can 2. Continuous life 3. Ease of transferring ownership 4. Limited liability of stockholders
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Disadvantages of a Corporation
1. Separation of ownership 2. Corporate taxation 3. Government regulation
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Authority Structure of a Corporation
Stockholders
Board of Directors
Chairperson of the Board
President
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stockholders Rights
Vote Dividends Liquidation Preemption
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stockholders Equity
Two main components: 1. Paid-in capital (contributed capital) 2. Retained earnings
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Capital Stock
nAuthorized shares nOutstanding shares
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Capital Stock
Ordinary Shares/ Common Stock Most basic form of capital stock issued by every corporation Preference Shares/ Preferred Stock Has several preferences over ordinary shares/ common stock
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Capital Stock
Par Value Stock No-par Stock
An arbitrary amount assigned to a share of stock
Does not have par value, but may have stated value
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 2
Measure the effect of issuing stock on a companys financial position.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Ordinary Shares at Par
Suppose IHOPs ordinary shares has a par value of P10 per share. The company issues 6,200 shares of ordinary shares at par. What is the entry?
General Journal Date Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Jan 8
Cash (6,200 x $10) Ordinary share capital stock To record issuance of stock
62,000 62,000
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Ordinary Shares at above Par
Suppose IHOPs common stock has a par value of P0.01 per share. The company issues 6,200 shares of common stock for P10 per share. What is the entry?
Date General Journal Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Jul 23 Cash (6,200 x $10) Common Stock Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par To record issuance of stock
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
62,000 62 61,938
Ordinary Shares at above Par
Stockholders Equity Ordinary shares, P.01 par; 40,000 shares authorized, 6,200 shares issued Paid-in capital in excess of par Total paid-in capital Retained earnings Total stockholders equity
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
62 61,938 P 62,000 194,000 P256,000
Ordinary Shares at Par
Suppose IHOPs common stock is no par value stock. The company issues 6,200 shares of common stock for $20 per share. What is the entry?
General Journal Date Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Jul 23 Cash (6,200 x $10) Common Stock To record issuance of stock
124,000 124,000
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Preferred Stock
nAccounting for preferred stock
follows the pattern illustrated for common stock.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 3
Describe how treasury stock transactions affect a company.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Treasury Stock Transactions
nShares that a company has
issued and later reacquired. nReasons nStock purchase plan distribution nIncrease net assets nAvoidance of a takeover
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
IHOP Corp. Before Purchase of Treasury Stock
Stockholders Equity at December 31, 2005 (if no treasury stock purchased) Common Stock $ 203 Paid-in capital in excess of par 69,655 Retained earnings 193,632 Total equity $263,490
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
IHOP Corp. Purchase of Treasury Stock
During 2005, IHOP paid $5,170 to purchase 288 shares of its common stock as treasury stock.
General Journal Date Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Nov 1
Treasury Stock Cash Purchased treasury stock
5,170 5,170
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
IHOP Corp. After Purchase of Treasury Stock
Stockholders Equity at December 31, 2005 (with treasury stock purchased) Common Stock $ 203 Paid-in capital in excess of par 69,655 Retained earnings 193,632 Less: Treasury stock (288 shares at cost) (5,170) Total equity $258,320
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Sale of Treasury Stock
Assume that on July 22, 2006, the shares of treasury stock are sold for $5,300.
General Journal Date Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Jul 22 Cash Treasury Stock Paid-in Capital from Treasury Stock Transactions Sold treasury stock
5,300 5,170 130
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
IHOP Corp. After Sale of Treasury Stock
Stockholders Equity at December 31, 2006 Common Stock Paid-in capital in excess of par Retained earnings Total equity Equity before purchase of treasury stocks Increase in stockholders equity
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
203 69,785 193,632 $263,620 263,490 $ 130
Retirement of Stock
nDecreases the outstanding
stock of the corporation nRetired shares cannot be reissued nThere is no gain or loss on retirement
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Retained Earnings Account
Balance = Net income less -Net losses -Dividends declared
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Dividends and Splits
nDividend - corporations return
to its stockholders of some of the benefits of earnings nStock split - increase in the number of authorized, issued, and outstanding shares
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Dividend Dates
nDeclaration date nDate of record nPayment date
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 4
Account for dividends and measure their impact on a company.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Preferred Stock Dividends
Pinecraft Industries, Inc., has both common stock and 100,000 shares of preferred stock outstanding. Preferred dividends are paid at the annual rate of $1.50 per share. In 20x9, the company declares an annual dividend of $1,000,000. Preferred dividend (100,000 $1.50 per share) Common dividend (remainder: $1,000,000 $150,000) Total dividend
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
$150,000 850,000 $1,000,000
Preferred Stock Dividends
The preferred stock of Pinecraft is cumulative. Suppose the company passed the 20x6 preferred dividend of $150,000. In 20x7, the company declares a $500,000 dividend.
General Journal Date Accounts and Explanations PR Debit Credit
Retained Earnings Dividends Payable-Preferred Dividends Payable-Common Declared a cash dividend *$150,000 x 2 years
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
500,000 300,000* 200,000
Stock Dividends
nSmall stock dividends: 25% or less nLarge stock dividends: above 25%
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stock Dividend
IHOP declared a 10% stock dividend in 2006. Assume IHOP had 20,000,000 shares of common stock outstanding. The stock is trading for $15 per share. How would this stock dividend be recorded?
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stock Dividend
Date General Journal Accounts and Explanations In thousands PR Debit Credit
Retained Earnings (20,000,000 X 10% X $15) Common Stock
(20,000,000 X 10% X $0.01)
30,000 20 29,980
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par Common Distributed a 10% stock dividend
For a large stock dividend, debit Retained Earnings and credit Common Stock for the par value of the shares.
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stock Splits
nIncreases number of
authorized, issued, and outstanding shares of stock nProportionate reduction in stocks par value nDecreases market price
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stock Splits
nThe market price of a share of
Quaker Oats has been approximately $25. Assume that the company wants to decrease it to $12.50. This 2-for-1 split means that the company would have twice as many shares outstanding after the split as is had before the split.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 5
Use different stock values in decision making.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Stock Values
nMarket value nRedemption value nLiquidation value nBook value
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Book Value Per Share
nPreferred stock = (Redemption value + Dividends in arrears) Number of shares of preferred outstanding nCommon stock =
(Total stockholders equity Preferred equity) Number of shares of common stock outstanding
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Book Value
Stockholders Equity Preferred stock, 6%, $100 par, 5,000 shares authorized, 400 shares issued, redemption value $130 per share Additional paid-in capital in excess of par preferred Common stock, $10 par, 20,000 shares authorized, 5,500 shares issued Additional paid-in capital in excess of par common Retained earnings Treasury stock common, 500 shares at cost Total stockholders equity
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
$ 40,000 4,000 55,000 72,000 85,000 ( 15,000) $241,000
Book Value
Suppose that four years (including the current year) cumulative preferred dividends are in arrears and that preferred stock has a redemption value of $130 per share.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Book Value
Preferred equity: Redemption value (400 shares 130) $ 52,000 Cumulative dividends ($40,000 $0.06 4 yrs) 9,600 Preferred equity $ 61,600 Common equity: Total stockholders equity Less preferred equity Common equity Book value per share: $179,400 5,000 shares* *5,500 shares issued minus 500 treasury shares
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
$241,000 61,600 $179,400 $ 35.88
Learning Objective 6
Evaluate a companys return on assets and return on stockholders equity.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Rate of Return on Total Assets
(Net income + Interest expense) Average total assets Measure of a companys ability to generate profits from the use of its assets.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Return on Equity
Rate of return on common stockholders equity = (Net income Preferred dividends) Average common stockholders equity Measure of income earned from common stockholders investment in the company.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Learning Objective 7
Report stockholders equity transactions on the statement of cash flows.
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Reporting Stockholders Equity Transactions
During 2003, IHOP issued stock, repurchased stock, but paid no dividends. Cash flows from financing activities:
Proceeds from issuance of common stock $172,000 Purchase of treasury stock (5,170,000) Net cash used by financing activities $(4,998,000)
2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
End
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren
Source:
nfaculty.tamucc.edu/shall/2301/p
owerpoint/fa6ch09.ppt
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2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren