CH16
CH16
CH16
Edition
CHAPTER 16
Shareholders Equity
Brief
Exercises Exercises Problems
4, 6, 12,
14
2, 6, 11,
12
1, 4
1, 3, 5
2, 3, 4, 6
2, 4
1, 5, 12
1, 3, 5, 6,
12
3, 4, 5, 13,
14
1, 2, 4, 5,
6, 12
7, 8, 13
7, 8, 12
5, 6,
7, 8, 9, 10,
11
6, 9, 10,
2, 3, 7, 9,
11, 13, 14 10, 11, 12
8. Ratio analysis.
15
4, 12
16, 17
Writing
Assignments
3
5
5
Description
Recording the issuance of common and
preferred shares.
Subscribed shares.
Share issuances and repurchase.
Shareholders equity section.
Correcting entries for equity transactions.
Equity items on the balance sheet.
Preferred dividends.
Preferred dividends.
Stock split and stock dividend.
Entries for stock dividends and stock splits.
Dividend entries.
Shareholders equity section.
Participating preferred and stock dividend.
Dividends and shareholders equity section.
Comparison of alternative forms of financing.
Financial reorganization.
Financial reorganization.
Subscription, repurchase and lump-sum
issuance.
Equity transactions and statement preparation.
Share transactionsnoncash and lump sum.
Share repurchases.
Prepare shareholders equity section par
value shares.
Share transactions and equity section
preparation.
Cash dividend entries.
Preferred share dividends, cumulative and
participating.
Effect of dividends and splits on balance sheet
items.
Entries for shareholders equity transactions.
Dividend entries and balance sheet
presentation.
Analysis and classification of equity
transactions.
Subscribed shares and subscription receivable.
Secret reserves.
Conceptual issues equity.
Stock dividends and splits.
Financial reorganization.
Level of
Time
Difficulty (minutes)
Simple
10-15
Simple
Simple
Moderate
Moderate
Simple
Simple
Moderate
Simple
Simple
Simple
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Simple
Moderate
10-12
10-15
15-20
15-20
15-20
10-15
10-15
10-15
10-12
10-15
20-25
20-30
30-35
20-25
10-15
15-20
Simple
15-25
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
25-30
20-30
20-30
25-35
Moderate
35-40
Moderate
Moderate
15-20
20-25
Moderate
20-25
Moderate
Simple
15-20
25-35
Complex
35-45
Moderate
Moderate
Moderate
Simple
Moderate
15-20
25-35
20-25
25-30
20-30
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Dec.
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4,500
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2,500
15,000
17,500
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9 Dividends Payable............................................................
1,000,000
Cash..........................................................................
1,000,000
Trading Securities.............................................................
825,000
Gain on Appreciation of
Securities..............................................................
825,000
($1,400,000 - $575,000)
Retained Earnings............................................................
1,400,000
Property Dividends
Payable..................................................................
1,400,000
Oct. 8
No entry.
Oct. 23
Retained Earnings............................................................
300,000
Common Shares*..............................................................
200,000
Dividends Payable...................................................
500,000
June 1
Dividends Payable............................................................
500,000
Cash..........................................................................
500,000
105,000
249,000
Long-term Liability............................................................
2,300,000
Common Shares...................................................... 2,300,000
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SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES
Mar.
April 1
Land................................................... 60,000
Common Shares.........................
60,000
May
Aug. 1
Sept. 1
Nov.
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2.
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$1,000,000
$3,190,000
115,500
3,305,500
4,305,500
817,500
5,123,000
150,000
5,273,000
117,600
$5,155,400
(10,000
$817,500
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May 10
Cash......................................................... 600,000
Preferred Shares.............................
600,000
The share account is debited for the average per share amount
in the account ($16 per share based on the May 2nd transaction).
The difference between the average per share amount and the
purchase price is credited to Contributed Surplus.
May 31
Cash.........................................................
Common Shares.............................
8,500
8,500
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Chapter 16
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Share
Capital
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
I
NE
Retained
Earnings
I
D
NE
D
NE
D
I
D
NE
D
NE
Comprehensive
Income
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
NE
Net
Income
I
NE
NE
D
NE
D
I
NE
NE
NE
NE
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Chapter 16
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Common
Total
$16,000
$74,000
$90,000
$48,000
$42,000
$90,000
$57,778
$32,222
$90,000
Dividends in arrears
Current dividend
Pro rata share to
common
($250,000 X 8%)
Balance dividend pro
rata
($200,000 $450,000)
X $22,000
($250,000 $450,000)
X $22,000
Carrying value:
Preferred: $100 X 2,000
Common: $50 X 5,000
Total carrying value
$32,000
16,000
$32,000
16,000
$20,000
9,778
_______
$57,778
20,000
9,778
12,222
$32,222
12,222
$90,000
$200,000
$250,000
$450,000
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$566,000 - $144,000
=
$3,300,000
Preferred Common
$12,000
12,000 $120,000
38,364
383,636
$62,364 $503,636
Total
$ 12,000
132,000
422,000
$566,000
12.788%
$12,000 $554,000
$566,000
(c)
Current year
$12,000 $120,000
Additional 6%** to common
180,000
Participating (7.697%*)
23,091 230,909
$35,091 $530,909
$132,000
180,000
254,000
$566,000
$566,000 - $312,000
=
$3,300,000
7.697%
10%
(4%)
6%
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(b)
Retained Earnings
Stock Dividend
Distributable
(9,000,000 shares X $143)
Stock Dividend
Distributable
Common Shares
1,287,000,000
1,287,000,000
1,287,000,000
1,287,000,000
Large stock dividends and splits serve the same function with
regard to the securities markets. Both techniques allow the
Board of Directors to increase the quantity of shares and
channel share prices into the popular trading range.
For accounting purposes the 20%-25% rule reasonably views
large stock dividends as substantive stock splits. It is necessary
to capitalize the stated value with a stock dividend because the
number of shares is increased and the stated value per share
remains the same. Earnings are capitalized for purely procedural
reasons.
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Retained Earnings............................................................
1,995,000
Common Stock Dividend
Distributable..........................................................
1,995,000
(700,000 X 5% X $57)
Common Stock Dividend
Distributable..................................................................
1,995,000
Common Shares......................................................
1,995,000
(b)
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Retained Earnings............................................................
975,000
Common Stock Dividend
Distributable..........................................................
975,000
(500,000 shares X 5% X $39 = $975,000)
Common Stock Dividend Distributable..........................
975,000
Common Shares......................................................
975,000
(b)
(c)
January 5, 2005
Held-to-Maturity Investment in Bonds............................
35,000
Gain on Appreciation of
Investments (Bonds)............................................
35,000
Retained Earnings............................................................
135,000
Property Dividend Payable.....................................
135,000
January 25, 2005
Property Dividend Payable..............................................
135,000
Held-to-Maturity Investment in
Bonds..................................................................
135,000
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Preferred Common
Total
$250,000
$250,000
125,000 $180,000
305,000
25,000
60,000
85,000
$400,000 $240,000 $640,000
$125,000
60,000
X
$3
$ 180,000
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Retained Earnings............................................................
945,000
Common Stock Dividend
Distributable..........................................................
945,000
(60,000 X 15% X $105)
(c)
Common Shares...............................................................
315,000
Contributed Surplus.........................................................
787,500
Cash (10,500 X $105)...............................................
1,102,500
($1,800,000 / 60,000 X 10,500
= $315,000)
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1.
Dividends PayablePreferred
(2,000 X $8).....................................................................
16,000
Dividends PayableCommon
(25,000 X $3)...................................................................
75,000
Cash..........................................................................
91,000
2.
Common Shares...............................................................
14,800
Contributed Surplus.........................................................
114,700
Cash (3,700 X $35)...................................................
129,500
($100,000 / 25,000 X 3,700 = $14,800)
3.
4.
Retained Earnings............................................................
95,850
Common Stock Dividend
Distributable.......................................................
95,850
[(25,000 3,700) X 10% = 2,130 X
$45]
5.
6.
Retained Earnings............................................................
70,860
Dividends PayablePreferred
(3,000 X $8)............................................................
24,000
Dividends PayableCommon
[(25,000 3,700 + 2,130) X $2].............................
46,860
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Feller Corp.
Shareholders Equity12/31/05
Share capital
Preferred shares, $8, 10,000 shares
authorized, 3,000 shares issued
Common shares, 100,000 shares
authorized, 23,430 shares issued
Total share capital
Contributed surplus
Total paid-in capital
Retained earnings
Total shareholders equity
$ 305,000
181,050
486,050
40,300
526,350
533,290
$1,059,640
Computations:
Preferred shares $200,000 + $105,000 = $305,000
Common shares $100,000 - $14,800 + $95,850 = $181,050
Contributed surplus: $155,000 - $114,700 = $40,300
Retained earnings: $250,000 $95,850 $70,860 + $450,000 =
$533,290
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$660,000
$4,200,000
= 15.71%
Kingston Corp.
$594,000
$4,200,000
= 14.14%
$660,000
$4,200,000
= 15.71%
$660,000
$4,200,000
= 15.71%
(b) Kingston Corp. is the more profitable in terms of return on
shareholders equity. This may be shown as follows:
Kingston Corp.
$594,000
$2,700,000
= 22%
Benson Corp.
$660,000
$3,600,000
= 18.33%
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Current liabilities
Long-term debt
Common shares
Retained earnings
Funds
Supplied
$ 300,000
1,200,000
2,000,000
700,000
$4,200,000
Rate of Return
Accruing to
on Funds at
Cost of
Common
15.71%*
Funds
Shares
$ 47,130
$
0
$ 47,130
188,520
66,000 **
122,520
314,200
0
314,200
109,970
0
109,970
$659,820
$66,000
$593,820
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$101
$5.94
$63.50
$4.55
= 17 times earnings.
= 14 times earnings.
$2,000,000 + $700,000
= $27.00
100,000
Benson Corp.
$2,900,000 + $700,000
= $24.83
145,000
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120,000
330,000
Common Shares...............................................................
850,000
Contributed Surplus.........................................................
220,000
Retained Earnings................................................... 1,070,000
($450,000 + $620,000)
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(Time 15-25
Problem 16-2
Problem 16-3
Problem 16-4
*Problem 16-5
Problem 16-6
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Problem 16-8
Purposeto provide the student with an understanding of the effect which certain
preferred share provisions, such as cumulative and fully participating, have on
dividend distributions to common and preferred shareholders. The student is
required to allocate the dividends to each type of share under two different
assumptions: (1) the preferred share does possess these two aforementioned
provisions, and (2) the preferred share does not.
Problem 16-9
Problem 16-10
Problem 16-11
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SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEMS
PROBLEM 16-1
1.
Cash.................................................................. 160,000
Subscriptions Receivable............................... 220,000
Common Shares Subscribed..................
380,000
2.
3.
4.
5.
Cash.................................................................. 290,000
Common Shares (3,000 X $27)................
81,000
Preferred Shares*.....................................
209,000
*Total received
Assigned to common share
(3,000 X $27)
Assigned to preferred
$290,000
(81,000)
$209,000
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PROBLEM 16-2
AMADO LIMITED
Shareholders Equity
December 31, 2005
Share Capital
Preferred shares, $6, 1,000,000 shares authorized
325,000 shares issued and outstanding
Common shares, unlimited shares authorized
2,070,000 shares issued and outstanding
Total share capital
Contributed Surplus
Total paid-in capital
Retained earnings
Total shareholders equity
Preferred Shares
Bal. $ 3,000,000
1.
625,000
$ 3,625,000
4.
Common Shares
Bal. $10,000,000
2.
1,000,000
157,200
$10,842,800
$3,625,000
10,842,800
14,467,800
16,907,200
31,375,000
4,615,000
$35,990,000
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Retained Earnings
Bal. $5,500,000
7. 1,950,000 6.
2,100,000
8. 1,035,000
$4,615,000
Jan.
Feb.
June
July
5.
6.
7.
8.
July 1
Dec. 31
Dec. 31
Dec. 31
1
1
1
1
25,000 X $25
50,000 X $20
stock split: 1,050,000 shares X 2
30,000 X ($11,000,000 2,100,000 sh.)
= 30,000 X $5.24 = $157,200
30,000 X ($15 - $5.24) = $292,800
Net income
325,000 X $6 = $1,950,000
2,070,000 X 50 = $1,035,000
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PROBLEM 16-3
-1Cash..........................................................................100,000
Discount on Bonds Payable................................... 1,060
Bonds Payable.................................................
100,000
Preferred Shares..............................................
1,060
-2Machinery................................................................. 7,500
Common Shares (500 X $15)...........................
(Assuming the shares are regularly traded, the value
of the shares would be used.)
7,500
-3Retained Earnings...................................................132,000
Cash..................................................................
132,000
Dividend to preferred: $11 X 2,000 shares =
Dividend to common: $11 X 10,000 shares =
$22,000
$110,000
$132,000
-4Cash.......................................................................... 11,300
Preferred Shares..............................................
Common Shares..............................................
Fair market value of common (375 X $14)
Fair market value of preferred (100 X $65)
Aggregate
6,251
5,049
$5,250
6,500
$11,750
Allocated to common:
$5,250
$11,750
X $11,300 =
Allocated to preferred:
$6,500
$11,750
X $11,300 = 6,251
Total allocation
$5,049
$11,300
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6,200
3,000
3,200
$6,200
3,200
$3,000
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PROBLEM 16-4
(a) Common Shares ($30 X 380)........................... 11,400
Contributed Surplus........................................ 3,420
Cash ($39 X 380).......................................
14,820
(b) Common Shares ($30 X 300)...........................
Contributed Surplus........................................
Cash ($43 X 300).......................................
9,000
3,900
12,900
a.
b.
Common Shares
Bal.
$270,000
11,400
9,000
c.
147,000
d.
57,600
$454,200
a.
b.
**Contributed Surplus
Bal.
$9,000
3,420
3,900
$1,680
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*PROBLEM 16-5
HEINRICH CORPORATION
Shareholders Equity
December 31, 2005
Preferred shares, 8%, $100 par value,
10,000 shares authorized, 6,100 issued
Common shares, $2 par value,
200,000 shares authorized, 90,100 issued
Contributed surplus*
Total paid-in capital
Retained earnings
Total shareholders equity
$ 610,000
180,200
964,500
1,754,700
1,026,000
$2,780,700
6.
Preferred Shares
Bal.
$400,000
2.
10,000
3.
200,000
$ 610,000
Common Shares
Bal.
$160,000
1.
200
2.
2,000
5.
20,000
2,000
$ 180,200
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Retained Earnings
Bal. $780,000
7.
246,000
$ 1,026,000
Subscriptions Receivable
Bal. $40,000
4.
40,000
$0
Number of Preferred
shares
Bal.
4,000
2.
100
3.
2,000
6,100
shares
(1,000)
90,100 shares
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PROBLEM 16-6
(a)
10,500
14,000
24,500
-7Cash............................................................. 198,000
Preferred Shares.................................
198,000
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9,500 shares
Total share capital
Contributed surplus
$1,100,000
199,500
1,299,500
78,000
1,377,500
1,018,000
$2,395,500
Transaction
2
3
4
5
6
7
Totals
Preferred
Shares
Contr.
Surplus
Preferred
Common
Shares
Retained
Earnings
Number of
Shares
Preferred Common
$210,000
$1,672,000
(330,000) $30,000
48,000
)
(440,000
000,000
$78,000
198,000
10,000
15,200
(3,000)
(4,000)
(10,500)
$199,500
$(14,000)
1,032,000
$1,018,000
(500)
2,000
00,000
10,200
9,500
$1,100,000
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PROBLEM 16-7
(a)
Retained Earnings............................................................
72,500
Common Shares......................................................
72,500*
50,000*
301,250*
300,000 shares
1,250 shares
301,250 shares
X 1.00 per share
$301,250
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$ 50,000
50,000
300,000
$400,000
**Beginning balance
Net income
Available to pay dividends
$355,000
77,000
$432,000
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PROBLEM 16-8
Assumptions
(a)
Preferred,
noncumulative and
nonparticipating
Year
2003
2004
2005
2006
Paid-out Preferred
$13,000
$5.20
$26,000
$7.00
$57,000
$7.00
$176,000
$7.00
$.57 =
Common
-0$ .57a
$2.63b
$10.57c
(b)
Preferred, cumulative
and fully participating
Preferred Common
$ 5.20
-0d
$ 8.80
$ .27e
$14.25f
$1.43f
$44.00g
$4.40g
$26,000 $17,500*
15,000
*($17,500 = $7 X 2,500)
b
$2.63 =
$57,000 $17,500
15,000
$10.57
=
$176,000 $17,500
15,000
$8.80 =
e
$.27 =
$26,000 $22,000**
15,000
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Total
Total amount to be distributed $57,000
Preferred dividend ($7 X 2,500) (17,500)
Available for common and
participation
39,500
Ratable dividend to common
(7%** X $150,000)
(10,500)
Available for participation
29,000
Preferred .0725* X $250,000
2,500
Common .0725* X $150,000
15,000
Totals
*(.0725 =
$29,000
)
$250,000 + $150,000
$ 7.00
$.70
7.25
.73
$14.25
**(7%=
Total
Total amount to be
distributed
$176,000
Preferred dividend ($7 X 2,500) (17,500)
Available for common and
participation
158,500
Ratable dividend to common
(7% X $150,000)
(10,500)
Available for participation
148,000
Preferred .37* X $250,000
2,500
Common .37* X $150,000
15,000
Totals
*(.37 =
Per Share
Preferred Common
$ 1.43
$17,500
$250,000
Per Share
Preferred Common
$ 7.00
$ .70
37.00
3.70
$44.00
$4.40
$148,000
)
$250,000 + $150,000
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PROBLEM 16-9
Transactions:
(a) Assuming Guo Limited declares and pays a $.50 per share
cash dividend.
(1) Total assetsdecrease $5,000
(2) Common sharesno effect
(3) Contributed surplusno effect
(4) Retained earningsdecrease $5,000
(5) Total shareholders equitydecrease $5,000
(b) Guo declares and issues a 10% stock dividend when the
market price of the share is $12.
(1) Total assetsno effect
(2) Common sharesincrease $12,000
(10,000 X 10%) X $12
(3) Contributed surplus no effect
(4) Retained earningsdecrease $12,000 ($12 X 1,000)
(5) Total shareholders equityno effect
(c) Guo declares and issues a 40% stock dividend when the
market price of the share is $17 per share.
(1) Total assetsno effect
(2) Common sharesincrease $68,000 (10,000 X 40%) X
$17
(3) Contributed surplus no effect
(4) Retained earningsdecrease $68,000
(5) Total shareholders equityno effect
(d) Guo declares and distributes a property dividend
(1) Total assetsnet decrease $30,000 (5,000* X $6)
(2) Common sharesno effect
(3) Contributed surplus no effect
(4) Retained earningsdecrease $30,000
(5) Total shareholders equitydecrease $30,000
*10,000 common shares / 2 = 5,000 shares of ABC.
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60,000
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PROBLEM 16-10
(a)
Available-for-Sale Investment..........................................
37,250
Gain on Appreciation of Securities........................
(5,000* shares X $16)
$80,000
Less cost of 5,000 shares =
42,750**
$37,250
37,250
80,000
60,000
42,000
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PROBLEM 16-11
(a)
Retained Earnings
1,200,000
Cash
1,200,000
(Cash dividend of $.60 per share on 2,000,000 shares)
(b)
Retained Earnings
4,200,000
Common Shares
4,200,000
(Stock dividend of 6%, 120,000 shares, at $35 per share)
(c)
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Common shares
Issued 2,120,000 shares
Contributed surplus
Retained earnings
Total shareholders equity
$24,200,000
5,000,000
24,300,000
$53,500,000
Ducat Corporation
Statement of Retained Earnings
For the Year Ended December 31, 2005
Balance, January 1, 2005
Net income for 2005
Deduct dividends on common shares:
Cash dividend
Stock dividend (see note)
Balance December 31, 2005
$24,000,000
5,700,000
29,700,000
$1,200,000
4,200,000
5,400,000
$24,300,000
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PROBLEM 16-12
Okanagan Inc.
Shareholders Equity
June 30, 2005
Share Capital:
Preferred shares, $2.00, cumulative
and non-participating, 100,000
shares authorized, 50,000 shares
issuedNote A
Common shares, 300,000 shares
authorized, 116,000 shares issued
Common shares subscribed,
8,000 shares 2
Total share capital
Retained earnings
AppropriatedNote B
Unappropriated 3
Total shareholders equity
Note A:
Note B:
$2,200,000
$3,918,340 1
368,000 4,286,340
6,486,340
50,000
331,660
381,660
$6,868,000
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Common shares
$2,945,000
220,000
a
03/01/03
10,000
42.00
420,000
10/01/04
2,000
46.00
92,000
b
Subtotal
11/30/04
112,000
(2,000) 32.83
3,677,000
65,660
c
Subtotal
12/15/04
06/20/05
Total
110,000
5,500
500
116,000
52.00
3,611,340
286,000
21,000
$3,918,340
$ 690,000
40,000
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398,340
$ 331,660
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strictly prohibited.
Assignment 16-3
Purposeto require the student to define equity items, in part using the CICA
Handbook Section 1000 on Financial Statement Concepts, in part using Section
3860, and to provide examples of transactions and events that change the terms
defined.
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$ 2,000,000
(700,000
)
$1,300,000
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ASSIGNMENT 16-2
A secret reserve is created when shareholders equity is understated. Generally,
such reserves, often called hidden assets, are created or enlarged by practices
that understate assets and/or overstate liabilities. Such practices often result from
the application of the accounting convention or principle of conservatism.
Both of the practices cited tend to cause assets to be stated at lower amounts
than would be the case with other acceptable alternatives. The use of LIFO
during a period of steadily rising prices tends to cause the inventory cost to be
stated in terms of prices that prevailed when the method was adopted. When
such prices are compared to current prices, they are low; hence income and
shareholders equity are correspondingly low. The expensing of all human
resource costs as they are incurred, in effect, denies that such costs have
produced any future benefits. To the extent that such expenditures produce future
benefits, a portion of the costs should be capitalized as an intangible asset.
Secret reserves exist to the extent that assets have been understated by the
immediate expensing of all human resource costs.
It is possible to create a secret reserve by overstating liabilities. This could most
readily occur in recording estimated liabilities such as for product warranties,
contingent liabilities, or pensions at amounts in excess of actuarially determined
amounts, or for the restoration of property at the termination of a lease. Any such
overstatement of the ultimate liability overstates current expenses and thereby
understates shareholders equity. A secret reserve also would exist when a firm
has long-term, fixed interest debt outstanding during periods when interest rates
are increasing and much higher than on the debt. In a sense the concept of
secret reserves also can be extended to include the effects of holding an
excess of monetary liabilities over monetary assets. During a period of inflation
the reserve is in terms of general purchasing power whereas the previously
discussed reserves have been due to differences in money amounts.
There are several objections to the creation of secret reserves. Only insiders
are likely to know of their existence and value. Statement readers who are
unaware of the existence of secret reserves may regard a companys securities
as overvalued when, in fact, they may be undervalued or valued correctly. As a
result, shareholders may be willing to part with their shares for too little
consideration.
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ASSIGNMENT 16-3
(a)
(b) Transactions or events that change owners equity include revenues and
expenses, gains and losses (realized and unrealized), investments by
owners, distributions to owners, and changes within owners equity.
(c) Some examples of changes within owners equity that do not change the total
amount of owners equity are the retirement of treasury shares accounted
for by the single transaction method, reclassification of a deficit to share
capital in a financial reorganization (not the revaluation of assets),
conversion of preferred shares into common shares, stock dividends, and
retained earnings appropriations.
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ASSIGNMENT 16-4
(a) A stock dividend is the issuance by a corporation of its own shares to its
shareholders on a pro-rata basis without receiving payment for the shares.
The stock dividend results in an increase in the amount of the legal or stated
capital of the enterprise. The dividend is charged to retained earnings and, in
effect, acts to capitalize retained earnings.
From the legal standpoint, a stock split is distinguished from a stock dividend
in that a split results in an increase in the number of shares outstanding and
a corresponding decrease in the stated value per share. A stock dividend,
though it results in an increase in the number of shares outstanding, does
not necessarily result in a decrease in the stated value of the shares.
From an accounting standpoint, the major distinction is that a stock dividend
requires a journal entry to decrease retained earnings and increase paid-in
capital, while there is no entry for a stock split. Also, the distinction between
a stock dividend and a stock split is dependent upon the intent of the Board
of Directors in making the declaration. If the intent is to give to shareholders
some separate evidence of a part of their pro-rata interests in accumulated
corporate earnings, the action results in a stock dividend. If the intent is to
issue enough shares to reduce the market price per share, the action results
in a stock split, regardless of the form it may take. In other words, if the
action takes the form of a stock dividend but reduces the market price
markedly, it should be considered a stock split. Such reduction will seldom
occur unless the number of shares issued is at least 20% to 25% of the
number previously outstanding.
(b) The usual reason for issuing a stock dividend is to give the shareholders
something on a dividend date and yet conserve working capital.
A stock dividend that is charged to retained earnings reduces the total
accumulated earnings, and all stock dividends reduce the per share earnings.
Issuing a stock dividend to achieve these ends would be a public relations
gesture in that the public would be less likely to criticize the corporation for
high profits or undue retention of earnings.
A stock dividend also may be issued for the purpose of obtaining a wider
distribution of the shares. Although this is the main consideration in a stock
split, it may be secondary consideration in the issuance of a stock dividend.
The issuance of a series of stock dividends will accomplish the same
objective as a stock split.
A stock split is intended to obtain wider distribution and improved marketability
of shares by means of a reduction in the market value of the companys
shares.
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* ASSIGNMENT 16-5
(a) The purpose of a financial reorganization is to enable a company that has
gone through financial difficulty to have a fresh start for financial reporting
purposes. Generally, such would be a possibility for a company that has
incurred losses for several periods and, as a result, has a deficit. In such
circumstances, the company may have difficulty meeting interest and
principal payments on debt, and is unable to pay dividends until earnings
are sufficient to offset the deficit. This can result in serious questions
regarding the companys survival. Rather than declaring bankruptcy,
however, various events (e.g. economic conditions, new products
developed, new management team) may signal promise for successful
operations. Therefore, a financial reorganization, and not bankruptcy, may
be in the best interests of all stakeholders in the business. This would result
in elimination of the deficit, comprehensive revaluation of assets and
liabilities, and realignment of equity and non-equity interests (i.e. to enable
the company to continue as if it were a new entity).
(b) The requirements and accounting for a financial reorganization to result in a
fresh start are:
1. There must be a negotiated agreement between all equity and nonequity holders.
2. There is a substantial realignment of the equity and non-equity interests
such that the rights and claims of each change relative to each other.
3. The same party does not control the company both before and after the
reorganization. (This is required before comprehensive asset and liability
revaluation can take place.)
Note that companies are always permitted to write down their assets
when appropriate. It is the recognition of non-recorded assets and
recognition of higher fair values that is the issue here.
4. The assets and liabilities are comprehensively re-valued at amounts
negotiated in the agreement or, if not established in the agreement, at
fair value. The re-valued net assets cannot exceed the fair value of the
enterprise as a whole. The revaluation adjustment (difference between
the prior-to-reorganization carrying values and these new values) is
accounted for as a capital transaction and recorded as share capital,
contributed surplus, or a separately identified account in shareholders
equity.
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Recommendations:
Treat as a split since the value of the company is unchanged and only the
number of shares would increase. This will not help with the issue of showing
excess retained earnings. Perhaps the company could consider giving a smaller
stock dividend which would be treated as a dividend and accounted for at FV.
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Show net
- As traders, economic substance
is that they are earning
commissions on the trades
similar to a real estate agent
- Never take possession of the
goods traded
Recommendations:
Difficult to justify treating these as sales unless legal title is taken to the energy
traded. The company must show that they have the risks and rewards of
ownership of the energy.
Issue: How to account for the purchase of the engineering business
Record notes as assets impairment? Record notes as share reduction or not
at all
- The value of the transaction should be - Alternatively, this represents a
determined at the transaction date
contingency the company really owes
- Currently, the note represents a
the vendor an additional amount if the
benefit to the company that the
engineering firm does well
company has access to
- Recognize the contingency if likely
- As the situation changes, then this
and measurable this is difficult to
would be reassessed
measure at this point since future
- If the notes are no longer repayable,
profits are unknown. Therefore, since
the value might be added to the cost of the shares are already issued and
the investment since it really
currently have fair value, should record
represents additional consideration
the note. Given the tie in to the
paid for the business.
acquisition may consider recording
- Makes the company look better
the notes as a contra account
Recommendation:
Record as an asset since it has future benefit at this point in time.
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INTRAWEST CORPORATION
(a) The number of common shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2003 was
47,560,062. The percentage of authorized which are issued and outstanding cannot
be calculated since an unlimited number of shares are authorized. None of the
50,000 authorized NRP shares are issued and outstanding at June 30, 2003 since
the remaining shares outstanding last year were redeemed during the 2002/2003
fiscal year.
(b) NRP stands for Non-Resort Preferred. These shares came about in 1997 when the
company reorganized its share capital to separate the companys non-resort real
estate assets from the remainder of its business. Each of the existing common
shares was exchanged for one new common share plus one NRP share. The NRP
shares are more like preferred shares than like common since they were subject to
redemption. Depending on the terms of redemption, these shares may be more like
debt than like preferred shares. Not enough information is provided in the notes to
determine this but given that the shares were classified as equity, one can assume
that they did not have enough characteristics of debt to be classified as such.
(c) The average issue price of the common shares during the year was US$8.80. (This
was calculated by dividing the $2,685,000 issue proceeds amount by the 305,000
number of shares issued.)
(d) The purpose of repurchasing the NRP shares was not disclosed. One possible
reason is that the company no longer needed the capital associated with this special
class of shares. The number of shares repurchased was 5,163,436 and the price
was US$1.30 (or CDN $2.02.)
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RA16-2
(a) The following chart presents the four classes of shares which existed at 2002.
Series 2
Preference
shares
Series 1
Preference
shares
19 votes
per share*
Rights in terms of
dividends
Preference
Preference
Multiple
voting
shares
10 votes
per share
Subordinate
to
preference
shares,
rank equally
with other
classes
none
Subordinate
voting
shares
1 vote per
share
Subordinate
to
preference
shares, rank
equally with
other
classes
Non-voting
shares
none**
Subordinate
to
preference
shares,
rank equally
with other
classes
1-Aug-02
Number of shares
70,545,434
Carrying value
Average carrying value per
share
5.95
98,371,658
1-Aug-03
8.30
98,280,291
8.30
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01/02
02/03
Shares issued:
6,077
9,645
405,000
27,405,513
58,454
13,031
27,826,235
71,485
Issue Proceeds:
$
66,000
43,000
6,156,
000
390,570,000
Total proceeds
Average issue price
$ 369,000
33,000
$396,835,000
$
$ 402,000
14.26
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$ 5.62
RA16-3
BANK OF MONTREAL VERSUS ROYAL BANK OF
CANADA
Bank of Montreal
(a) and (b)
Year-end
Balance
of
common
shares ($ millions)
Number
of
common
shares outstanding
Average carrying value
Market price on
March 16, 2004
(as listed on TSX)
Authorized share capital:
Preferred shares, in
series
Common shares
(c)
10/31/03
$3,662
Royal Bank of
Canada
10/31/03
$7,018
499,632,368
656,021,122
$7.33
$10.70
$52.86
$62.35
Unlimited number
Unlimited number
Unlimited number
Unlimited number
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2003
Bank of Montreal
2002
2001
# of
# of
Amount shares Amount
shares
Amount
# of
shares
3,459
492,504
3,375
489,084
3,173
522,584
Issued under
shareholder
dividend
reinvestment and
share purchase
plan
4
6
1,10
1
4
4
1,20
5
3
5
903
Issued under
stock option plan
12
9
5,32
6
3
7
1,92
3
11
4
6,177
34
9
29
2
1,135
2
7
63
5
40
0
10,28
5
(22
)
(2
)
(283
)
(332
)
3,662
499,632
3,459
492,504
3,375
Beg. balance
Issued on
exchange of
shares of
subsidiary
corporations
Cancellation of
stock options
granted on
acquisition of an
investment
Repurchased for
cancellation
Ending balance
(52,000)
489,084
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Royal Bank
2002
# of
Amount
shares
2003
Beg. balance
Issued
Issued under
stock option plan
Issued on
acquisition of
Centura Banks
Issued on
acquisition of
Richardson
Greenshields
Purchased for
cancellation
Ending balance
2001
Amount
# of
shares
6,979
665,257
6,94
0
674,021
3,076
576
193
5,303
176
5,211
81
2,819
3,31
7
67,413
1
5
31
8
13
(154)
(14,539)
(152)
(14,293)
(112)
(10,927)
7,01
8
656,021
6,979
665,257
6,940
Amount
# of
shares
602,398
12,305
674,021
Over the past three years, both companies have had issuances of common shares
for the following transactions:
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(e) The Bank of Montreal Class B preferred shares have the unique feature of
being able to be issued in a foreign currency. The company may have created
a class of shares with this type of feature to make the shares more
attractive
to
foreign investors.
(f) The amount of cash dividends declared per share and the total amount by
which dividends affected shareholders equity are presented below for each
company.
Cash dividends declared in 2003
Bank of Montreal
1.39
1.2
1.33
1.19
US1.49
0.90
US.80
1.18
1.38
US1.44
1.53
Royal Bank
$1.34
$
(748)
$1.72
$
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(1,205)
(g) The rate of return on common shareholders equity for each company is
presented below. Royal Banks return on common shareholders equity is slightly
higher than that of Bank of Montreal.
Bank of
Montreal
Net income (1)
Less: Preferred dividends (2)
Net income available to common shareholders (3) = (1) - (2)
Total shareholders' equity, beginning (4)
Less: Preferred shares (5)
Common shareholders' equity, beginning (6) = (4) - (5)
Total shareholders' equity, ending (7)
Less: Preferred shares (8)
Common Shareholders' equity, ending (9) = (7) - (8)
Average Common shareholders' equity (10) = [(6) + (9)] /(2)
Return on common shareholders' equity (11) = (3) / (10)
$
1,825
(
82)
1,7
43
11,8
94
(1,5
17)
10,3
77
12,4
82
(1,4
46)
11,0
36
10,7
07
16.28%
Royal Bank
$
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3,005
(68
)
2,937
18,783
(1,545
)
17,238
18,375
(832
)
17,543
17,391
16.89%
RA16-4
(a) As of December 28, 2002, Canadian Tire had the following: Common Shares:
authorized, 3,423,366 shares; issued, 3,423,366. All of the authorized
common shares are issued.
Class A Non-Voting Shares: authorized,
100,000,000 shares; issued, 76,430,998. The number of shares issued
represents 76% of the authorized Class A shares.
(b) The Class A Non-voting shares have a stated dividend of $.01 per share per
annum which is cumulative and also participate fully in dividends with
common shares over and above this stated cumulative dividend. Although
they do not vote, the shareholders may attend most meetings and vote
separately as a class to elect a specified number of directors. These features
which allow some voting privileges and the opportunity to share in earnings
above a stated amount make these preferred shares more similar to common
shares than to traditional preferred shares. The common shares can be
converted at any time into Class A Non-voting shares on a share per share
basis.
(c) Canadian Tire repurchases shares every year because it has a policy of
repurchasing, over the long term, approximately the same number of Class A
non-voting shares as are issued under various stock compensation and
dividend reinvestment programs. The purpose of these repurchases is to
offset the expected dilutive effect on earnings per share of the various stock
programs. The company was less successful in repurchasing as many as
were issued in 2002 than in 2001. In 2001, the net increase in number of
shares was only 26,146 while in 2002 the net increase was 1,275,519.
(d) The excess of the amount paid on re-acquisition, over the average carrying
value of the shares re-acquired, was charged to retained earnings. The
journal entry would have been (in millions of dollars):
DR Retained Earnings
$5.9
DR Class A shares
$2.5
CR
Cash
$8.4
(e) The average price of the shares at the beginning of the year was $8.27
($621.9 million / 75,155,479 shares). The shares were repurchased at $27.05.
The market price of the shares as of March 16, 2004 is $53.50, which is much
higher than the average price at the beginning of the year.
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RA16-5
MDS INC.
The financial reporting issues surrounding the stock dividend include whether the stock
dividend should result in any capitalization of retained earnings and, if so, at what
amount the capitalization should occur.
When a stock split occurs, there is no change in total shareholders equity or in the dollar
amount of retained earnings or share capital. That is, no entry is made to capitalize
retained earnings; the only changes are in the number of shares outstanding and the
book value per share.
Some argue that a stock dividend is essentially the same in substance as a stock split
and should be treated the same way as a stock split, with no entry being made to
capitalize any amount of retained earnings as share capital. US GAAP requires this
approach for large stock dividends where the number of shares issued is more than 20
to 25 % of the number previously outstanding. The argument to support this treatment
is that large stock dividends impact the market much the same way as a stock split.
Since the MDS stock dividend was one for one, it would be considered a large dividend.
Canadian GAAP is silent on this issue but companies incorporated under the Canada
Business Corporations Act are required by this legislation to capitalize the stock dividend
at the market value amount, regardless of the size of the stock dividend. Others argue
that an entry should be made but that the amount capitalized should be the carrying
value per share amount rather than the market value per share amount.
Regardless of which method is chosen, the total amount of shareholders equity is
unchanged. The issue is one of allocation of amounts within shareholders equity.
Solutions Manual
16-79
Copyright 2005 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. Unauthorized copying, distribution, or transmission of this page is
strictly prohibited.
Solutions Manual
16-80
Copyright 2005 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. Unauthorized copying, distribution, or transmission of this page is
strictly prohibited.