Act 230 Final Exam
Price Earnings Ratio
Stock Price/ Earnings per share
Seasoned Equity Offerings
any future stock issuings
Declaring cash dividends to be paid
board of directors declares on the declaration date. creates legal obligation
Preferred Stock carries priority over common stock
both for dividends and at liquidation
Corporations start raising money
by selling stock to founders of the business or friends and family
Items that require seperate disclosure on the income statement after income from continuing operations are:
discontinued operations and extraordinary items
Stock Dividends/Splits
distributing more shares of companies stock rather than cahs
Privately Held Corporaton
doesnt allow investment by the general public and has fewer stockholders, no SEC
Disadvantages of a Corporation
double taxation and more paperwork
Typical Iventory Ratios
Grocery Stores (perishable): 20.0 Auto Dealership: 3.0 Dept. Stores: 6.0
On declaration date
1) increase dividends account 2) increase dividends payable account 3)will determine which/when stock owners will get the distribution
Paid in capital
amount stockholders have invested in the company
Corporation issued 10,00 shares of $1 par value common stock at $10 per share. Recorded as 100,000 debit to cash and $100,000 credit to common stock. Result of this entry:
Additional paid in capital will be understated. Common stock will be overstated
The Accounting Equation
Assets=Liiabilities + SE
Calculating Issued Shares
Authorized- Unissued
Income Statement
determines cash flows from operating activities
Recording Sale of Treasury Stock
Debit Cash Credit- Treasury Stock and Additonal Paid in capitaal
Recording Large Stock Split
Debit Stock Dividends, Credit to Common Stock
Recording Small Stock Split
Debit Stock Dividends, Credit- Common Stock and Additional Paid in Capital
Recording Issuance of NO par value shares for cASH
Debit- Cash Credit Common Stock
Recording Preferred Stock Issues
Debit- Cash Credit- Preferred stock and Additional Paid in capital
Recording Declaration of Cash Dividend
Debit- Dividends Credit- Dividends payable
Recording Par value stock issueance
Debit- cash Credit- Common Stock Credit- Additional Paid-in Capital fro the portion of cash above par value
Recording Payment of Cash Dividends
Debit- dividends payable credit- cash
Recording Treasury Stock
Debit-treasury stock credit- cash
Calculating Outstanding Shares
Issued - Treasury Stock
Two Primary Advantages of a corporation
Limited Liability and the ability to raise capital and transfer ownership
Earnings Per SHare Equation
Net Income- Dividends on Preferredd stock/ Avg shares of Common stock outstanding
Return on Equity Equation
Net income/ Avg. SE
Se w/ Accumulated Deficit
Total paid in capital- accumulated deficit= SE on balance sheet
Accumulated Deficit
a debit balance in retained earnings. result of losses exceeding income
S Corporation
allows a company to enjoy limited liability as a corporation but taxes as a partnership. smaller companies
retained earnings
amount of earnings a corporation has kept or retained
Invested capital
amount of money paid into a company by its owners
Stock of a Publicly held corporation
can be traded on the NYSE, NASDAQ, OTC regulated by the SEC
Operating Activities
cash receipts and cash payments for transactions relating to revenue and expense activities. include payment of cash on inventory purchases, salaries and rent
Investing Actvities
cash transactions involving the ourchase and sale of long term assets and current investments
Balance Sheet
changes in asset, liability and SE accounts
No par value
common stock that has not been assigned a par value
Stockholders
control the company
3 Characteristics of Preferred Stock
convertible- exhcnaged for common stock redeemable- returned to corp. for set price CUmulative- priority over future dividends, if divs are not given for a year
Ratios that evaluate a company's ability to pay long term debts
debt to equity ratio, times interest earned ratio
Buying shares back
decreases stockholders equity debits treasury stock (increases, and credits cash (decreases)
Articles of incorporation
describe: a) the nature of the firms business activities b) shares of stock to be issued c) the initial board of directors
Retained Earnings
earnings not paid out as dividends to stockholders Net Income- Dividends usuallycredit balance
corporation
entity that is legally separate from its owners and pays its own income taxes
Ratio Analysis is Useful for:
evaluating a company's performance given the level of its other resources, comparing a company's performance with itself over time, comparing two companies of different size in the same industry
Financing Activities
external financing , stockholders and lenders
Requires Seperate disclosure after income from continuing operations
extraordinary gain or loss not resurecting costs, impairment loss or gain on sale of land
Net Income
forecasts future cash flow and future net income
Limited Liability
guarantees that stockholders in a corporation can lose no more than what they invested
Preferred Stock
have first rights ti specified amount in regard to dividends, and get preference in distribution of assets no voting rights usually cumulative
An extraordinary gain or loss is reported seperately because:
it materiality affects current year income, it is unlikely to occur again in the forseeable future, and if it remains in income from continuing operations it distorts earnings
Par Value
legal capital per share of stock when the corporation is first established has no relationship to the market value of common stock is not market value!
Extraordinary gain or loss
material, unusual, infrequent
Return on Market Value of Equity
net income/ market value of equity(ending stock price X shares outstanding)
Stockholders equity accounts
normally have credit balances except in balance sheet
outstanding stock
number of shares held by investors
issued stock
number of shares sold to investors
Where are extraordinary items presented on the financial statements?
on the income statement after discontinued operations
Three Primary Classifications of SE
paid in capital, retained earnings and treasury stock
Venture Capital Firms
provide additional financing for a percentage of ownership in the company
Indirect Method
reporting operating activities in the statement of cash flows, less costly and easy to prepare begins w/ net income
Direct Method
reporting operating activities in the statement of cash flows, more logically presents it ignored transactions that have no cash flow effect like depreciation
Treasury Stock
repurchased shares included as shares issued but not shares outstanding contra account
Stockholder Rights
right to vote, to receive dividends, share in the distribution of assets
value stocks
stocks priced low in relation to current earnings.
growth stocks
stocks whose future earnings investors expect higher.
statement of SE
summarizes the changes in the balance in each SE account over a period of time
treasury stock
the corporations own stock
Initial Public Offering
the first time a corporation issues stock to the public
Why do companies buy back their own stock?
to boost underpriced stock, to distribute surplus cash without paying dividends, to boost earnings per share, and to satisfy employee stock ownership plans
Result of stock split
total assets,liabilites and SE do NOT change
Indirect and Direct Methods
total net cash flows from operating activities are identical
Authorized Stock
total number of shares available to sell
Noncash activities
transactions that do not increase or decrease cash but resulting significant investing and financing activities -purchase of long term assets by issuing debt -purchase of long term assets by issuing stock -conversion of bonds payable into CS -exchange of long term assets
stated value
treated and recorded the same as pra value shares
dividends in arrears
unpaid dividends\not reported as a liability. recorded in the notes to financial statements
Angel Investors
wealthy individuals willing to invest funds on a promising business venture
When to issue stock to the public
when equity financing exceeds $20 million