How do you find "Market Price per Share" on a Company's financial documents?
The 'Market' price for stock changes daily. The only stock value you are likely to find on financial statements are the 'par' value of the stock. Earnings per share are going to vary..depending on what the stock was purchased for. Dividends per share can be found by dividing the amount payed out in dividends for the year by the number of stocks outstanding, which is probably in parentheses somewhere in the 'Stockholder's Equity' on the Balance Sheet. Hope this helps!
Where can one find a company's pre-IPO financial statements?
You can find very limited financial statements and financial data if you look at a company's annual filing (Form 10-K) in the year that it goes public.The SEC requires that the income statement show the current year plus the past two previous fiscal years (the periods in which they were operating as a privately held company). The balance sheet requires only the previous fiscal year.There is limited financial data in a table called Selected Financial Data which contains financial highlights (it is not a full blown income statement) for the current fiscal year plus the previous four fiscal years.Other than that, you'll be hard-pressed to find any financial statements or financial data while the company was privately held. A privately-held company, as the name implies, is exactly that -- private.I hope this helps.
What are the best 5 or 6 companies in the banking and financial sector to buy and hold onto for 3 to 5 years?
1.HDFC BANK2.SBI3.YES BANK4.ICICI BANK5.RBL BANK
Year-end financial statements?? Accounting II...FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. Please Help.?
Selected year-end financial statements of Cabot Corporation follow. (All sales were on credit; selected balance sheet amounts at December 31, 2012, were inventory, $47,900; total assets, $219,400; common stock, $105,000; and retained earnings, $53,148.) Income statement for year ended Dec. 31, 2013 Sales...........................$454,60... Cost of goods sold.........298,250 Gross profit...................156,350 Operating expenses.......98,500 Interest expense............4,700 Income before taxes......53,150 Income taxes.................21,411 Net income......................$31,739 BALANCE SHEET Dec. 31, 2013 Assets Cash...............16,000 Short-term investments..9,200 Accounts recievable, net..29,800 Notes recieveable (trade)..6,000 Merchandise inventory......32,150 Prepaid expenses.........2,550 Plant assets, net..........153,300 Total Assets.....249,000 continued.... LIABILITIES AND EQUITY Accounts Payable..............17,500 Accrued wages payable......3,800 Income Taxes payable........4,800 Long-term note payable, secured by mortage on plant assets...............................65,... Common stock................105,000 Retained earnings...........52,500 Total Liabilities and Equity.....249,000 Compute the following: (1) current ratio, (2) acid-test ratio, (3) days' sales uncollected, (4) inventory turnover, (5) days' sales in inventory, (6) debt-to-equity ratio, (7) times interest earned, (8) profit margin ratio, (9) total asset turnover, (10) return on total assets, and (11) return on common stockholders' equity. (Use 365 days a year. Do not round intermediate calculations.) Choose numerator.. (Accounts recievable, cost of goods sold, current assets, current liabilities, net sales.) Choose denominator.. (Current assets, current liabilities, net sales, accounts recievable [net], cost of goods sold, average accounts recievable, [net] ) I am completely confused with this chapter, help would be appreciated. Thank you.
Financial Accounting: Financial Statements Effects of Stock Transactions?
I am having a hard time figuring out how to fill in the stockholder's equity section of the balance sheet. Can anyone help? (....) is where numbers are suppose to go. Thanks in Advance! Identifying and Analyzing Financial Statement Effects of Stock Transactions The stockholders' equity of Verrecchia Company at December 31, 2011, follows: Common stock, $ 5 par value, 350,000 shares authorized; 150,000 shares issued and outstanding $ 750,000 Paid-in capital in excess of par value 600,000 Retained earnings 346,000 During 2012, the following transactions occurred: Jan. 5 Issued 10,000 shares of common stock for $12 cash per share. Jan. 18 Purchased 4,000 shares of common stock for the treasury at $14 cash per share. Mar. 12 Sold one-fourth of the treasury shares acquired January 18 for $17 cash per share. July 17 Sold 500 shares of the remaining treasury stock for $13 cash per share. Oct. 1 Issued 5,000 shares of 8%, $25 par value preferred stock for $35 cash per share. This is the first issuance of preferred shares from the 50,000 authorized shares. Prepare the December 31, 2012, stockholders' equity section of the balance sheet assuming that the company reports net income of $72,500 for the year. Stockholders' Equity Paid-in capital $ ... 8% Preferred stock, $25 par value, 50,000 shares authorized, 5,000 shares issued and outstanding Common stock, $5 par value, 350,000 shares authorized; 160,000 shares issued ..... | $.... Additional paid-in capital Paid-in capital in excess of par value-preferred stock .... Paid-in capital in excess of par value-common stock .... Paid-in capital from treasury stock .... Total paid-in capital .... | .... Retained earnings .... Less: Treasury stock (2,500 shares) at cost .... Total Stockholders' Equity $ ....
I cant seem to figure this Business Finance question out?
Simply discount the semi-annual cash flows by (1 +the semi-annual required rate of return..0.07/2 )= 1.035 Bond N..n = 20 * 2(for semi-annual) = 40 since the only payment is at maturity, price = 20,000/1.035^40 = $5,051.45 Bond M cash flows (total n = 20 * 2 = 40): #1 thru 12: $0 #13 thru 28: 16 payments of $1,100..discount $1,100/1.035^13 + 1100/1.035^14, etc thru exponent = 28 #29 thru #39: 15 payments of: $1400... 1400/1.035^29 + 1400/1.035^30....thru exponent = 39, then.. #40: the last coupon 1400 + par$20,000 = 21,400.....21,400/1.035^40 Sum of the discounted cash flows = price
E11-16 Before preparing financial statements for the current year, the chief accountant for Springer Company?
The declaration and payment of $50,000 cash dividend was recorded as a debit to Interest Expense $50,000 and a credit to Cash $50,000. How it was recorded Dr Interest Expense 50,000 Cr Cash 50,000 Correcting Entry: Dr Dividends (or Retained Earnings) 50,000 Cr Interest Expense 50,000 A 10% stock dividend (1,000 shares) was declared on the $10 par value stock when the market value per share was $16. The only entry made was: Retained Earnings (Dr.) $10,000 and Dividend Payable (Cr.) $10,000. The shares have not been issued. How it was recorded: Dr Retained Earnings 10,000 Cr Dividends Payable 10,000 Correcting Entry Dr Retained Earnings 6,000 Dr Dividends Payable 10,000 Cr Stock Dividends Distributable 10,000 Cr Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par Value 6,000 A 4-for-1 stock split involving the issue of 400,000 shares of $5 par value common stock for 100,000 shares of $20 par value common stock was recorded as a debit to Retained Earnings $2,000,000 and a credit to Common Stock $2,000,000. How it was recorded: Dr Retained Earnings 2,000,000 Cr Common Stock 2,000,000 Correcting Entry Dr Common Stock 2,000,000 Cr Retained Earnings 2,000,000 *Stock splits have no transaction journal entries.