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DIVIDENDS. What are dividends?. Dividends are distribution to shareholders of corporate earnings in proportion to the number of shares held by them. Distributions may take the form of cash, non-cash assets, notes and shares of company’s own stock. Cash Dividends.
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What are dividends? • Dividends are distribution to shareholders of corporate earnings in proportion to the number of shares held by them. • Distributions may take the form of cash, non-cash assets, notes and shares of company’s own stock.
Cash Dividends • Cash dividends are dividends that are distributable in the form of cash. This is the most common type of dividend: Retained Earnings XXX Cash Dividends Payable XXX (To record decla
Journal Entry for Cash Dividends Retained Earnings XXX Cash Dividends Payable XXX (To record declaration of dividends) Cash Dividends Payable XXX Cash XXX (To record payment of dividends)
Scrip Dividends • Scrip Dividends are in fact deferred cash dividends. A scrip dividend is declared when the corporation has sufficient Retained Earnings balance but not sufficient funds at that time for a cash dividend. • Scrip dividends consist of a written promise to pay certain amounts at some future date.
Journal Entry for Scrip Dividends Retained Earnings XXX Scrip Dividends Payable XXX (To record the declaration of dividends) Scrip Dividends Payable XXX Interest Expense XXX Cash XXX (To record payment of dividends plus interest)
Property Dividends • Dividends distributable in the form of non-cash assets. Retained Earnings XXX Property Dividends Payable XXX (To record the declaration of dividends) Property Dividends Payable Assets (To record distribution of dividends)
Stock Dividends • A share capital dividend or stock dividend is a distribution to shareholders in the form of corporation’s own share capital. • This type of dividend does not affect total assets and total shareholder’s equity rather it simply represents a transfer of capital from retained earnings to contributed capital.
Dividends on Preference Shares • When dividends are paid, the dividend requirements on preference shares must be paid before any payment can be made to ordinary shares. • The preference shares may be: • Cumulative • Noncumulative • Participating • Nonparticipating
Illustrative Problem • The Fortune Corp. declared and paid cash dividends for the last three years as follows: 2010 – P120,000; 2011 – P200,000; 2012 – P300,000. No dividends were paid for two years prior to 2006. the capital structure of the company for the last three years follows: 10% Preference share capital, P100 par, 5,000 shares outstanding – P500,000 Ordinary share capital, P50 par, 5,000 shares outstanding The annual dividend requirement on preference shares is P50,000 or P10 per share. At the beginning of 2010, dividends are in arrears. For two years.
Case 1 – The preference shares are noncumulative and nonparticipating
Case 2 – The preference shares are cumulative but not participating
Case 3 – The preference shares are noncumulative but fully participating
Case 4 – The preference shares are cumulative and fully participating