Do you remember playing the board game Monopoly when you were
younger? If you landed on the Chance space, you picked a card. The
Chance card may have paid a $50 dividend. At the time, you probably
were just excited for the additional funds.
Figure 14.8 Chance Card. A Chance card from a Monopoly
game indicates that the bank pays you a dividend of $50. (credit:
modification of “Monopoly Chance Card” by Kerry Ceszyk/Flickr, CC
BY 4.0)
For corporations, there are several reasons to consider sharing
some of their earnings with investors in the form of dividends.
Many investors view a dividend payment as a sign of a company’s
financial health and are more likely to purchase its stock. In
addition, corporations use dividends as a marketing tool to remind
investors that their stock is a profit generator.
This section explains the three types of dividends—cash
dividends, property dividends, and stock dividends—along with stock
splits, showing the journal entries involved and the reason why
companies declare and pay dividends.
The Nature and Purposes of Dividends
Stock investors are typically driven by two factors—a desire to
earn income in the form of dividends and a desire to benefit from
the growth in the value of their investment. Members of a
corporation’s board of directors understand the need to provide
investors with a periodic return, and as a result, often declare
dividends up to four times per year. However, companies can declare
dividends whenever they want and are not limited in the number of
annual declarations. Dividends are a distribution of a
corporation’s earnings. They are not considered expenses, and they
are not reported on the income statement. They are a distribution
of the net income of a company and are not a cost of business
operations.
CONCEPTS IN PRACTICE
So Many Dividends
The declaration and payment of dividends varies among companies.
In December 2017 alone, 4,506 U.S. companies declared either cash,
stock, or property dividends—the largest number of declarations
since 2004.12
It is likely that these companies waited to declare dividends until
after financial statements were prepared, so that the board and
other executives involved in the process were able to provide
estimates of the 2017 earnings.
Some companies choose not to pay dividends and instead reinvest
all of their earnings back into the company. One common scenario
for situation occurs when a company experiencing rapid growth. The
company may want to invest all their retained earnings to support
and continue that growth. Another scenario is a mature business
that believes retaining its earnings is more likely to result in an
increased market value and stock price. In other instances, a
business may want to use its earnings to purchase new assets or
branch out into new areas. Most companies attempt dividend
smoothing, the practice of paying dividends that are
relatively equal period after period, even when earnings fluctuate.
In exceptional circumstances, some corporations pay a
special dividend, which is a one-time extra
distribution of corporate earnings. A special dividend usually
stems from a period of extraordinary earnings or a special
transaction, such as the sale of a division. Some companies, such
as Costco Wholesale Corporation,
pay recurring dividends and periodically offer a special dividend.
While Costco’s regular quarterly
dividend is $0.57 per share, the company issued a $7.00 per share
cash dividend in 2017.13
Companies that have both common and preferred stock must consider
the characteristics of each class of stock.
Note that dividends are distributed or paid only to shares of
stock that are outstanding. Treasury shares are not outstanding, so
no dividends are declared or distributed for these shares.
Regardless of the type of dividend, the declaration always causes a
decrease in the retained earnings account.
Dividend Dates
A company’s board of directors has the power to formally vote to
declare dividends. The date of declaration is the
date on which the dividends become a legal liability, the date on
which the board of directors votes to distribute the dividends.
Cash and property dividends become liabilities on the declaration
date because they represent a formal obligation to distribute
economic resources (assets) to stockholders. On the other hand,
stock dividends distribute additional shares of stock, and because
stock is part of equity and not an asset, stock dividends do not
become liabilities when declared.
At the time dividends are declared, the board establishes a date
of record and a date of payment. The date of
record establishes who is entitled to receive a dividend;
stockholders who own stock on the date of record are entitled to
receive a dividend even if they sell it prior to the date of
payment. Investors who purchase shares after the date of record but
before the payment date are not entitled to receive dividends since
they did not own the stock on the date of record. These shares are
said to be sold ex dividend. The date of
payment is the date that payment is issued to the investor
for the amount of the dividend declared.
Cash Dividends
Cash dividends are corporate earnings that
companies pass along to their shareholders. To pay a cash dividend,
the corporation must meet two criteria. First, there must be
sufficient cash on hand to fulfill the dividend payment. Second,
the company must have sufficient retained earnings; that is, it
must have enough residual assets to cover the dividend such that
the Retained Earnings account does not become a negative (debit)
amount upon declaration. On the day the board of directors votes to
declare a cash dividend, a journal entry is required to record the
declaration as a liability.
Accounting for Cash Dividends When Only Common Stock Is
Issued
Small private companies like La Cantina often have only one
class of stock issued, common stock. Assume that on December 16, La
Cantina’s board of directors declares a $0.50 per share dividend on
common stock. As of the date of declaration, the company has 10,000
shares of common stock issued and holds 800 shares as treasury
stock. The total cash dividend to be paid is based on the number of
shares outstanding, which is the total shares issued less those in
treasury. Outstanding shares are 10,000 – 800, or 9,200 shares. The
cash dividend is:
9,200shares×$0.50=$4,6009,200shares×$0.50=$4,600
The journal entry to record the declaration of the cash
dividends involves a decrease (debit) to Retained Earnings (a
stockholders’ equity account) and an increase (credit) to Cash
Dividends Payable (a liability account).
While a few companies may use a temporary account, Dividends
Declared, rather than Retained Earnings, most companies debit
Retained Earnings directly. Ultimately, any dividends declared
cause a decrease to Retained Earnings.
The second significant dividend date is the date of record. The
date of record determines which shareholders will receive the
dividends. There is no journal entry recorded; the company creates
a list of the stockholders that will receive dividends.
The date of payment is the third important date related to
dividends. This is the date that dividend payments are prepared and
sent to shareholders who owned stock on the date of record. The
related journal entry is a fulfillment of the obligation
established on the declaration date; it reduces the Cash Dividends
Payable account (with a debit) and the Cash account (with a
credit).
Property Dividends
A property dividend occurs when a company
declares and distributes assets other than cash. The dividend
typically involves either the distribution of shares of another
company that the issuing corporation owns (one of its assets) or a
distribution of inventory. For example, Walt Disney
Company may choose to distribute tickets to visit
its theme parks. Anheuser-Busch
InBev, the company that owns the Budweiser and
Michelob brands, may choose to distribute a case of beer to each
shareholder. A property dividend may be declared when a company
wants to reward its investors but doesn’t have the cash to
distribute, or if it needs to hold onto its existing cash for other
investments. Property dividends are not as common as cash or stock
dividends. They are recorded at the fair market value of the asset
being distributed. To illustrate accounting for a property
dividend, assume that Duratech Corporation has 60,000 shares of
$0.50 par value common stock outstanding at the end of its second
year of operations, and the company’s board of directors declares a
property dividend consisting of a package of soft drinks that it
produces to each holder of common stock. The retail value of each
case is $3.50. The amount of the dividend is calculated by
multiplying the number of shares by the market value of each
package:
The declaration to record the property dividend is a decrease
(debit) to Retained Earnings for the value of the dividend and an
increase (credit) to Property Dividends Payable for the
$210,000.
The journal entry to distribute the soft drinks on January 14
decreases both the Property Dividends Payable account (debit) and
the Cash account (credit).
Comparing Small Stock Dividends, Large Stock Dividends, and
Stock Splits
Companies that do not want to issue cash or property dividends
but still want to provide some benefit to shareholders may choose
between small stock dividends, large stock dividends, and stock
splits. Both small and large stock dividends occur when a company
distributes additional shares of stock to existing
stockholders.
There is no change in total assets, total liabilities, or total
stockholders’ equity when a small stock dividend, a large stock
dividend, or a stock split occurs. Both types of stock dividends
impact the accounts in stockholders’ equity. A stock split causes
no change in any of the accounts within stockholders’ equity. The
impact on the financial statement usually does not drive the
decision to choose between one of the stock dividend types or a
stock split. Instead, the decision is typically based on its effect
on the market. Large stock dividends and stock splits are done in
an attempt to lower the market price of the stock so that it is
more affordable to potential investors. A small stock dividend is
viewed by investors as a distribution of the company’s earnings.
Both small and large stock dividends cause an increase in common
stock and a decrease to retained earnings. This is a method of
capitalizing (increasing stock) a portion of the company’s earnings
(retained earnings).
Stock Dividends
Some companies issue shares of stock as a dividend rather than
cash or property. This often occurs when the company has
insufficient cash but wants to keep its investors happy. When a
company issues a stock dividend, it distributes
additional shares of stock to existing shareholders. These
shareholders do not have to pay income taxes on stock dividends
when they receive them; instead, they are taxed when the investor
sells them in the future.
A stock dividend distributes shares so that after the
distribution, all stockholders have the exact same percentage of
ownership that they held prior to the dividend. There are two types
of stock dividends—small stock dividends and large stock dividends.
The key difference is that small dividends are recorded at market
value and large dividends are recorded at the stated or par
value.
Small Stock Dividends
A small stock dividend occurs when a stock
dividend distribution is less than 25% of the total outstanding
shares based on the shares outstanding prior to the dividend
distribution. To illustrate, assume that Duratech Corporation has
60,000 shares of $0.50 par value common stock outstanding at the
end of its second year of operations. Duratech’s board of directors
declares a 5% stock dividend on the last day of the year, and the
market value of each share of stock on the same day was $9.
Figure 14.9 shows the stockholders’ equity section of
Duratech’s balance sheet just prior to the stock declaration.
Figure 14.9 Stockholders’ Equity for Duratech.
(attribution: Copyright Rice University, OpenStax, under CC
BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
The 5% common stock dividend will require the distribution of
60,000 shares times 5%, or 3,000 additional shares of stock. An
investor who owns 100 shares will receive 5 shares in the dividend
distribution (5% × 100 shares). The journal entry to record the
stock dividend declaration requires a decrease (debit) to Retained
Earnings for the market value of the shares to be distributed:
3,000 shares × $9, or $27,000. An increase (credit) to the Common
Stock Dividends Distributable is recorded for the par value of the
stock to be distributed: 3,000 × $0.50, or $1,500. The excess of
the market value over the par value is reported as an increase
(credit) to the Additional Paid-in Capital from Common Stock
account in the amount of $25,500.
If the company prepares a balance sheet prior to distributing
the stock dividend, the Common Stock Dividend Distributable account
is reported in the equity section of the balance sheet beneath the
Common Stock account. The journal entry to record the stock
dividend distribution requires a decrease (debit) to Common Stock
Dividend Distributable to remove the distributable amount from that
account, $1,500, and an increase (credit) to Common Stock for the
same par value amount.
To see the effects on the balance sheet, it is helpful to
compare the stockholders’ equity section of the balance sheet
before and after the small stock dividend.
After the distribution, the total stockholders’ equity remains
the same as it was prior to the distribution. The amounts within
the accounts are merely shifted from the earned capital account
(Retained Earnings) to the contributed capital accounts (Common
Stock and Additional Paid-in Capital). However, the number of
shares outstanding has changed. Prior to the distribution, the
company had 60,000 shares outstanding. Just after the distribution,
there are 63,000 outstanding. The difference is the 3,000
additional shares of the stock dividend distribution. The company
still has the same total value of assets, so its value does not
change at the time a stock distribution occurs. The increase in the
number of outstanding shares does not dilute the value of the
shares held by the existing shareholders. The market value of the
original shares plus the newly issued shares is the same as the
market value of the original shares before the stock dividend. For
example, assume an investor owns 200 shares with a market value of
$10 each for a total market value of $2,000. She receives 10 shares
as a stock dividend from the company. She now has 210 shares with a
total market value of $2,000. Each share now has a theoretical
market value of about $9.52.
Large Stock Dividends
A large stock dividend occurs when a
distribution of stock to existing shareholders is greater than 25%
of the total outstanding shares just before the distribution. The
accounting for large stock dividends differs from that of small
stock dividends because a large dividend impacts the stock’s market
value per share. While there may be a subsequent change in the
market price of the stock after a small dividend, it is not as
abrupt as that with a large dividend.
To illustrate, assume that Duratech Corporation’s balance sheet
at the end of its second year of operations shows the following in
the stockholders’ equity section prior to the declaration of a
large stock dividend.
Also assume that Duratech’s board of directors declares a 30%
stock dividend on the last day of the year, when the market value
of each share of stock was $9. The 30% stock dividend will require
the distribution of 60,000 shares times 30%, or 18,000 additional
shares of stock. An investor who owns 100 shares will receive 30
shares in the dividend distribution (30% × 100 shares). The journal
entry to record the stock dividend declaration requires a decrease
(debit) to Retained Earnings and an increase (credit) to Common
Stock Dividends Distributable for the par or stated value of the
shares to be distributed: 18,000 shares × $0.50, or $9,000. The
journal entry is:
The subsequent distribution will reduce the Common Stock
Dividends Distributable account with a debit and increase the
Common Stock account with a credit for the $9,000.
There is no consideration of the market value in the accounting
records for a large stock dividend because the number of shares
issued in a large dividend is large enough to impact the market; as
such, it causes an immediate reduction of the market price of the
company’s stock.
In comparing the stockholders’ equity section of the balance
sheet before and after the large stock dividend, we can see that
the total stockholders’ equity is the same before and after the
stock dividend, just as it was with a small dividend (Figure
14.10).
Figure 14.10 Stockholders’ Equity Section of the
Balance Sheet for Duratech. (attribution: Copyright Rice
University, OpenStax, under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
Similar to distribution of a small dividend, the amounts within
the accounts are shifted from the earned capital account (Retained
Earnings) to the contributed capital account (Common Stock) though
in different amounts. The number of shares outstanding has
increased from the 60,000 shares prior to the distribution, to the
78,000 outstanding shares after the distribution. The difference is
the 18,000 additional shares in the stock dividend distribution. No
change to the company’s assets occurred; however, the potential
subsequent increase in market value of the company’s stock will
increase the investor’s perception of the value of the company.
Stock Splits
A traditional stock split occurs when a
company’s board of directors issue new shares to existing
shareholders in place of the old shares by increasing the number of
shares and reducing the par value of each share. For example, in a
2-for-1 stock split, two shares of stock are distributed for each
share held by a shareholder. From a practical perspective,
shareholders return the old shares and receive two shares for each
share they previously owned. The new shares have half the par value
of the original shares, but now the shareholder owns twice as many.
If a 5-for-1 split occurs, shareholders receive 5 new shares for
each of the original shares they owned, and the new par value
results in one-fifth of the original par value per share.
While a company technically has no control over its common stock
price, a stock’s market value is often affected by a stock split.
When a split occurs, the market value per share is reduced to
balance the increase in the number of outstanding shares. In a
2-for-1 split, for example, the value per share typically will be
reduced by half. As such, although the number of outstanding shares
and the price change, the total market value remains constant. If
you buy a candy bar for $1 and cut it in half, each half is now
worth $0.50. The total value of the candy does not increase just
because there are more pieces.
A stock split is much like a large stock dividend in that both
are large enough to cause a change in the market price of the
stock. Additionally, the split indicates that share value has been
increasing, suggesting growth is likely to continue and result in
further increase in demand and value. Companies often make the
decision to split stock when the stock price has increased enough
to be out of line with competitors, and the business wants to
continue to offer shares at an attractive price for small
investors.
CONCEPTS IN PRACTICE
Samsung Boasts a 50-to-1 Stock Split
In May of 2018, Samsung
Electronics14
had a 50-to-1 stock split in an attempt to make it easier for
investors to buy its stock.
Samsung’s market price of each
share prior to the split was an incredible 2.65 won (“won” is a
Japanese currency), or $2,467.48. Buying one share of stock at this
price is rather expensive for most people. As might be expected,
even after a slight drop in trading activity just after the split
announcement, the reduced market price of the stock generated a
significant increase to investors by making the price per share
less expensive. The split caused the price to drop to 0.053 won, or
$49.35 per share. This made the stock more accessible to potential
investors who were previously unable to afford a share at
$2,467.
A reverse stock split occurs when a company
attempts to increase the market price per share by reducing the
number of shares of stock. For example, a 1-for-3 stock split is
called a reverse split since it reduces the number of shares of
stock outstanding by two-thirds and triples the par or stated value
per share. The effect on the market is to increase the market value
per share. A primary motivator of companies invoking reverse splits
is to avoid being delisted and taken off a stock exchange for
failure to maintain the exchange’s minimum share price.
Accounting for stock splits is quite simple. No journal entry is
recorded for a stock split. Instead, the company prepares a memo
entry in its journal that indicates the nature of the stock split
and indicates the new par value. The balance sheet will reflect the
new par value and the new number of shares authorized, issued, and
outstanding after the stock split. To illustrate, assume that
Duratech’s board of directors declares a 4-for-1 common stock split
on its $0.50 par value stock. Just before the split, the company
has 60,000 shares of common stock outstanding, and its stock was
selling at $24 per share. The split causes the number of shares
outstanding to increase by four times to 240,000 shares (4 ×
60,000), and the par value to decline to one-fourth of its original
value, to $0.125 per share ($0.50 ÷ 4). No change occurs to the
dollar amount of any general ledger account.
The split typically causes the market price of stock to decline
immediately to one-fourth of the original value—from the $24 per
share pre-split price to approximately $6 per share post-split ($24
÷ 4), because the total value of the company did not change as a
result of the split. The total stockholders’ equity on the
company’s balance sheet before and after the split remain the
same.
THINK IT THROUGH
Accounting for a Stock Split
You have just obtained your MBA and obtained your dream job with
a large corporation as a manager trainee in the corporate
accounting department. Your employer plans to offer a 3-for-2 stock
split. Briefly indicate the accounting entries necessary to
recognize the split in the company’s accounting records and the
effect the split will have on the company’s balance sheet.
YOUR TURN
Dividend Accounting
Cynadyne, Inc.’s has 4,000 shares of $0.20 par value common
stock authorized, 2,800 issued, and 400 shares held in treasury at
the end of its first year of operations. On May 1, the company
declared a $1 per share cash dividend, with a date of record on May
12, to be paid on May 25. What journal entries will be prepared to
record the dividends?
Solution
A journal entry for the dividend declaration and a journal entry
for the cash payout:
To record the declaration:
Date of declaration, May 12, no entry.
To record the payment:
THINK IT THROUGH
Recording Stock Transactions
In your first year of operations the following transactions
occur for a company:
Net profit for the year is $16,000
100 shares of $1 par value common stock are issued for $32 per
share
The company purchases 10 shares at $35 per share
The company pays a cash dividend of $1.50 per share
Prepare journal entries for the above transactions and provide
the balance in the following accounts: Common Stock, Dividends,
Paid-in Capital, Retained Earnings, and Treasury Stock.
Footnotes
12 Ironman at Political Calculations. “Dividends by the
Numbers through January 2018.” Seeking Alpha. February 9, 2018.
seekingalpha.com/article/414...s-january-2018