Fap Ii CH-4
Fap Ii CH-4
Fap Ii CH-4
Now assume that Hydro-Slide issues an additional 1,000 shares of the $1 par
value common stock for cash at $5 per share. The amount received above
the par value, in this case $4 ($5 - $1), is credited to Paid-in Capital in Excess
of Par— Common Stock. The entry is:
Issuing No-Par Common Stock for Cash
When no-par common stock has a stated value, the entries are similar to
those illustrated for par value stock.
The corporation credits the stated value to Common Stock.
Also, when the selling price of no-par stock exceeds stated value, the
corporation credits the excess to Paid-in Capital in Excess of Stated Value—
Common Stock.
Example
assume that instead of $1 par value stock, Hydro-Slide, Inc. has $5 stated
value no-par stock and the company issues 5,000 shares at $8 per share for
cash. The entry is as follows.
Accounting for Preferred Stock
Demand to a larger segment of potential investors, a
corporation may issue an additional class of stock, called
preferred stock.
Preferred stock has contractual provisions that give it some
preference or priority over common stock.
Typically, preferred stockholders have a priority as to;
1. distributions of earnings (dividends) and
2. assets in the event of liquidation.
However, they generally do not have voting rights.
Like common stock, corporations may issue preferred stock
for cash or for noncash assets.
The entries for these transactions are similar to the entries
for common stock.
When a corporation has more than one class of stock,
each paid-in capital account title should identify the stock to
which it relates.
A company might have the following accounts:
Preferred Stock,
Common Stock,
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par—Preferred Stock, and
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par— Common Stock.
For example, if Stine Corporation issues 10,000 shares of $10
par value preferred stock for $12 cash per share, the entry to
record the issuance is as follows.
Accounting for Treasury Stock
A corporation may buy its own stock to provide shares for
resale to employees, for reissuing as a bonus to employees, or
for supporting the market price of the stock.
Such stock that a corporation has once issued and then
reacquires is called treasury stock.
Treasury stock is a corporation’s own stock that it has issued
and subsequently reacquired from shareholders but not
retired.
A corporation may acquire treasury stock for various
reasons:
1. To reissue the shares to officers and employees under
bonus and stock compensation plans.
2. To increase trading of the company’s stock in the
securities market
3. To have additional shares available for use in the
acquisition of other companies.
4. To reduce the number of shares outstanding and
thereby increase earnings per share.
Another infrequent reason for purchasing shares is that
management may want to eliminate hostile shareholders by
buying them out.
Purchase of Treasury Stock
The accounting for its sale differs when treasury stock is sold
above cost than when it is sold below cost.
Mead does not record a $2,000 gain on sale of treasury stock for two
reasons.
(1) Gains on sales occur when assets are sold, and treasury stock is not an
asset.
(2) A corporation does not realize a gain or suffer a loss from stock
transactions with its own stockholders.
SALE OF TREASURY STOCK BELOW COST
When a company sells treasury stock below its cost, it usually debits to Paid-
in Capital from Treasury Stock the excess of cost over selling price.
Thus, if Mead, Inc. sells an additional 800 shares of treasury stock on October
1 at $7 per share, it makes the following entry.