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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 1 Corporations: Paid-in Capital and the Balance Sheet Chapter 13
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 2 Objective 1 Identify the characteristics of a corporation
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 3 CharacteristicsCharacteristics Separate legal entity from the owners (stockholders) - formed under laws of a particular state Continuous life and transferability of ownership - ownership divided into shares of stock that can be transferred to another No mutual agency - owners can not act as agents of the business Limited liability of stockholders - stockholders are not responsible for the debts of the corporation
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 4 CharacteristicsCharacteristics Separation of ownership and management - board of directors appoints officers to manage the business Corporate taxation - corporation pays franchise tax, federal and state income taxes Government regulation
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 5 Organizing a Corporation Incorporators obtain charter from the state Charter authorizes corporation to –Issue stock –Conduct business in accordance with state law and the corporation’s bylaws
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 6 Organizing a Corporation Stockholders elect board of directors Board –Sets policy –Appoints officers –Elects a chairperson
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 7 Capital Stock Corporate ownership - evidenced by a stock certificate Total number of shares authorized is limited by charter
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 8 Stockholders’ Equity Two components: –Paid-in capital –Retained earnings
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 9 Stockholders’ Equity Sole-proprietorCorporation Owner, Capital Investments Net Income Paid in Capital Investments Retained Earnings Net Income Withdrawals Dividends Separate investments by owners (stockholders) and the earnings of the company into 2 sections of stockholders’ equity
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 10 Stockholders’ Equity Issue stock GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT CashXXXX Common StockXXXX
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 11 Stockholders’ Equity Close income summary GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Income SummaryXXXX Retained EarningsXXXX
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 12 Stockholders’ Rights Four basic rights –Vote –Dividends –Liquidation –Preemption
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 13 Classes of Stock Common stock - most basic form of capital stock Preferred stock - owners have certain advantages over common stockholders –Receive dividends before common –Upon liquidation, receive assets before common –Right to vote sometimes withheld
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 14 Classes of Stock Par value No-par value
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 15 Objective 2 Record the issuance of stock
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 16 Issuing Stock Paid-in Capital Common Stock Par Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par Amount received over par Cash Amount received
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 17 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Issuing Stock On June 2, Mustang Properties issued 1,000 shares of $1 par common stock for cash of $1 per share Jun2 Cash 1,000 Common Stock1,000 (1,000 shares x $1)
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 18 E13-14E13-14 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Jun19 Cash 8,000 Common Stock1,000 Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par-common7,000 Just the par value goes to the Common Stock account. Everything else goes to the Paid in Capital in Excess
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 19 E13-14E13-14 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Jun19 Cash 8,000 Common Stock1,000 Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par-common7,000 Jun19 Cash 8,000 Common Stock1,000 Paid-in Capital in Excess of Stated-common7,000 What if this stock was no par stock with a stated value of $1? How would the entry be different?
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 20 E13-14E13-14 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Jun19 Cash 8,000 Common Stock1,000 Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par-common7,000 Jun19 Cash 8,000 Common Stock8,000 What if this stock was true no par stock? How would the entry be different? Note: All of the proceeds from the sale of stock becomes part of legal capital
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 21 E13-14E13-14 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Jul3 Cash 15,000 Preferred Stock15,000 This is no par stock, so the entire proceeds are credited to the Preferred Stock account
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 22 E13-14E13-14 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT Jul11 Equipment 20,000 Common Stock3,000 Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par – Common17,000 When you issue stock for a noncash asset, debit the asset for its fair market value
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 23 E13-14 (2) Paid-in Capital Preferred Stock Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par, Common Common Stock 1,0007,000 15,000 3,00017,000 4,000 24,000 Total Paid-in Capital = $43,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 24 Objective 3 Prepare the stockholders’ equity section of a corporation balance sheet
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 25 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT E13-17E13-17 Aug6Cash13,000 Common Stock500 Paid in Capital in Excess of Par, Common12,500 12Cash20,000 Preferred Stock20,000 14Land26,000 Common Stock1,000 Paid in Capital in Excess of Par, Common25,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 26 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT E13-17E13-17 Aug31Income summary40,000 Retained earnings40,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 27 E13-17E13-17 Stockholders’ Equity Paid-in capital: Preferred stock, $3, no-par, 100,000 authorized, 300 issued……………….$20,000 Common stock, $1 par, 500,000 authorized, 1,500 issued…………….1,500 Paid-in capital in excess of par common……………………………… 37,500 Total paid-in capital……………………$59,000 Retained earnings………………………. 40,000 Total stockholders’ equity…………… $99,000 Notice how the stock is described in each line…..par value, number of shares authorized and then number of shares issued
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 28 Objective 4 Account for cash dividends
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 29 Dividend Dates Declaration date Date of record Payment date
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 30 Declaring and Paying Dividends S13-8 Preferred stock: 4% x $100,000$4,000 Common: $0.50 x 50,00025,000 Total dividends$29,000 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT 2008 Dec15Retained earnings29,000 Dividends payable29,000 The declaration of a cash dividend decreases retained earnings and creates a current liability
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 31 Declaring and Paying Dividends S13-8 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT 2009 Jan 4Dividends payable29,000 Cash29,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 32 Preferred: Per Share Dividend Stated as percentage of par value or as specified amount How much does one share of 3% preferred stock with a $50 par value receive when dividends are declared and paid? $1.50
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 33 Preferred: Per Share Dividend Stated as percentage of par value or as specified amount How much does one share of $4 preferred stock with a $50 par value receives when dividends are declared and paid? $4
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 34 Cumulative & Noncumulative Preferred Stock Cumulative preferred stock - accumulates dividends each year until the dividends are paid –Dividends in arrears - dividends passed or not paid –Dividends in arrears - not a liability Noncumulative preferred stock – dividends not paid do not accumulated from one year to the next Assume that preferred stock is cumulative if it is not specifically designated as noncumulative
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 35 S13-9S13-9 1. Preferred stock is cumulative because it is not specifically designated as noncumulative 2. Preferred dividend per year: 5% x $10 x 4,000 = $2,000 2005: Preferred stockholders get $2,000 Common stockholders get the rest, $13,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 36 S13-9S13-9 3. 2006: Dividends in arrears = $2,000 2007: Dividends in arrears = $4,000 2008: Preferred stockholders get $6,000 (2 years in arrears and current year) Common stockholders get the rest, $9,000 What if the preferred stock was noncumulative? How would the $15,000 be divided? Preferred, $2,000 and Common, $13,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 37 E13-21E13-21 1. Preferred stock is cumulative because it is not specifically designated as noncumulative 2. Preferred dividend per year: 8% x $10 x 20,000 = $16,000 2007: Preferred stockholders get $10,000 (Note: Dividends in arrears of $6,000) Common stockholders get nothing
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 38 E13-21E13-21 3. 2008: Preferred stockholders get: Dividends in arrears$6,000 Current year’s16,000 Total to preferred stockholders$22,000 Common stockholders get the rest, $28,000
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 39 Objective 5 Use different stock values in decision making
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 40 Different Values of Stock Market value - current selling price Book value - equity a stockholder has in net assets of the corporation
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 41 Book Value per Share Book value common = (Stockholders’ equity – Preferred Equity) ÷ Number of shares outstanding
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 42 E13-23E13-23 Book value per share on common: Total stockholders’ equity$277,000 Attributable to preferred: $50 par x 1,000 shares(50,000) Attributable to common$227,000 Per share: $227,000 / 5,000 = $45.40
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 43 E13-24E13-24 Book value per share on common: Total stockholders’ equity$277,000 Attributable to preferred: Dividends in arrears ($50,000 x 6% x 3 years)(9,000) $50 par x 1,000 shares(50,000) Attributable to common$218,000 Per share: $218,000 / 5,000 = $43.60
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 44 Objective 6 Evaluate return on assets and return on stockholders’ equity
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 45 Rate of Return on Total Assets E13-25 Net Income + Interest Expense Average Total Assets $18,000,000 + 2,400,000 ($326,000,000 + 317,000,000) / 2 $20,400,000 $321,500,000.063
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 46 Rate of Return on Common Stockholders’ Equity - E13-25 Net Income – Preferred Dividends Average Common Stockholders’ Equity $18,000,000 – ($2x 100,000) ($184,000,000 + $176,000,000) / 2 $17,800,000 $180,000,000.099
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 47 Objective 7 Account for the income tax of a corporation
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 48 Income Taxes Income tax expense = Income before income tax (from income statement) × Income tax rate Income tax payable = Taxable income (from the tax return filed with IRS) × Income tax rate Revenues and expenses may be reported in different periods for income statement and tax return purposes. Alternative depreciation methods may be used for book and tax purposes
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 49 Income Taxes Deferred tax liability = difference between income tax expense and income tax payable for any one year
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 50 E13-26E13-26 GENERAL JOURNAL DATEDESCRIPTIONREFDEBITCREDIT (in millions) Income Tax Expense (400 x 37.5%)150 Income Tax Payable (344 x 37.5%)129 Deferred Tax Liability21
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 51 E13-26E13-26 INCOME STATEMENT: Income before income tax$400 Income tax expense 150 Net income$ 250 BALANCE SHEET: Current liabilities: Income tax payable$ 129 Long-term liabilities: Deferred tax liability$ 21
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Copyright © 2007 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved 52 End of Chapter 13
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