Ch 15 Stockholders Equity Flashcards
Intermediate Accounting; Kieso, Weygandt, Warfield; 15th edition
Additional Paid-in Capital
Any excess over par value paid in by stockholders in return for the shares issued to them. Once paid in, the excess over par becomes a part of the corporation?s additional paid-in capital. Also called paid-in capital in excess of par. (p. 825).
book value per share
The amount each share of stock would receive if a company were liquidated, based on the amounts reported on the balance sheet. Computed as common stockholders? equity divided by the number of outstanding shares of stock. If the valuations on the balance sheet do not approximate the fair value of the shares, the book value per share figure loses its relevance. (p. 850).
callable preferred stock
Preferred stock that permits the corporation, at its option, to call or redeem the outstanding preferred shares at specified future dates and stipulated prices. The callable feature enables the company to use the capital from the issuance of the preferred stock until the need has passed or it is no longer advantageous. (p. 835).
cash dividends
Pro rata distributions of cash to a company?s stockholders as of a certain date (date of declaration), as approved by the company?s board of directors. A company may declare dividends either as a certain percent of par or as an amount per share. A declared cash dividend is a current liability of the company between the date of declaration and the payment date. Companies do not declare or pay cash dividends on treasury stock. (p. 839).
common stock
The basic ownership interest in a corporation, as evidenced by shares that represent proportional ownership. Holders of common stock bear the ultimate risks of loss (they are guaranteed neither dividends nor assets upon dissolution) and receive the benefits of success through distributions of dividends or sales at a gain. They also generally control the management of the corporation through voting rights. If a corporation has only one authorized issue of capital stock, that issue is by definition common stock. (p. 824).
contributed (paid-in) capital
The total amount paid in on capital stock?the amount provided by stockholders to the corporation for use in the business. Contributed capital includes the par value of all outstanding stock plus additional paid-in capital (any excess over par value paid in by stockholders). (p. 824).
convertible preferred stock
Preferred stock that allows stockholders, at their option, to exchange preferred shares for shares of common stock at a predetermined ratio. The convertible preferred stockholder not only enjoys a preferred claim on dividends but also has the option of converting into a common stockholder with unlimited participation in earnings. (p. 835).
cost method
A method of accounting for treasury stock, in which a company debits a treasury stock account for the cost of reacquiring stock to be held in the treasury and reports this account as a deduction from ?total paid-in capital and retained earnings? on the balance sheet. (p. 831).
cumulative preferred stock
Cumulative preferred stock constitutes a dividend in arrears. A corporation does not record a dividend in arrears as a liability (because no liability exists until the board of directors declares a dividend), but discloses it in a note to the financial statements. (p. 835).
dividend in arrears
A dividend on cumulative preferred stock that a company?s board of directors fails to declare at the normal date for dividend action. Such a dividend is said to have been ?passed.? The corporation must make up the passed dividend in a later year before it can pay any dividends to common stockholders. (p. 835).
earned capital
The capital that develops from a company?s profitable operations. It consists of all undistributed income that remains invested in the company. Earned capital is differentiated from contributed (paid-in) capital that comes from stockholders? purchase of capital stock. (p. 824).
large stock dividend
A stock dividend (a corporation?s issuance of its own stock to its stockholders, on a pro rata basis) of more than 20?25 percent of the number of shares previously outstanding. The company transfers, from retained earnings to capital stock, the par value of the stock issued. Such a distribution (often referred to as a split-up effected in the form of a stock dividend) typically reduces the market price of the stock, making it more marketable. The effects of large stock dividends thus make them more like stock splits than like an ordinary stock dividend. (p. 845).
leveraged buyout (LBO)
Transaction in which a company borrows money to finance the repurchase of all of the company?s outstanding stock, in order to eliminate public (outside) ownership. (p. 830).
liquidating dividends
Dividends based on amounts other than retained earnings, implying that the dividends are a return of the stockholder?s investment rather than of profits. Any dividend not based on earnings reduces corporate paid-in capital. (pp. 839, 841).
lump-sum sales
The issuance of two or more classes of securities for a single payment (lump sum). Companies use one of two methods of allocating the proceeds among the multiple classes of securities: the proportional method (allocate among classes on a proportional basis) or the incremental method (allocate using fair value of securities for which fair value is known and allocate the remainder to the class for which market value is not known). (p. 827).