Capital Surplus
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Capital Surplus
Capital surplus is often referred to as an additional amount you need to pay when you purchase shares that are sold at a value higher than their par value. It is also known as share premium or additional paid-in capital. It is an important part of shareholder’s equity, but none of it can be given or used by a shareholder as the funds are non-distributable. The funds can only be utilised by the company for its growth and development. It can also be used to buy back shares that were previously sold.
What is Capital Surplus?
The word surplus implies the difference between the actual value of the share (par value) and the value at which the share is being sold. Suppose you bought a few shares at $10 per share, but the actual value of the share is $1, then the difference would be $9. This $9 amount is what you would call a capital surplus.
Understanding Capital Surplus
Capital Surplus plays an important role in the stock market. Any stock that is sold over the par value will always have a capital surplus and the buyer will have to pay the surplus. However, some stocks do not have a par value, such stocks usually don’t generate any capital surplus. A capital surplus is a broad concept and doesn’t strictly apply to shares and stocks. It can also apply to adjustments related to tax or even conversion. A capital surplus can be triggered in different situations, including the following:
- Initial Public Offering: Once a business goes public for the first time, it will start issuing shares at an offering price. The capital surplus would be the difference between the par value of the shares and their offering price.
- Seasoned Equity Offering: When an existing public company starts issuing new shares, they do it at a price that is valued higher than the par amount. This added amount is calculated as capital surplus.
- Stock Options and Grants: An employee can also exercise the company’s stock options. Alternatively, they can also receive stock grants. If they do it at a cost that is valued lower than the market price, then the difference in amount between the exercised price and the market price would be what you call a capital surplus.
Capital Surplus Formula
Here’s the formula you can use to calculate the capital surplus of a transaction.
Capital Surplus = Excess/additional Amount – Par Value Amount
This amount you get from the difference is the capital surplus that goes straight to the company and the company can choose to invest this amount of cash for expansion of operations or R&D.
Benefits of Capital Surplus
When you pay a capital surplus for the shares you purchased, it’s the company that retains it. They get to benefit from it by investing that amount to expand their operational scale, from expanding production to diversifying the entire portfolio. The company also holds the right to use the capital surplus to buy back any shares that the company have sold.
Capital Surplus Example
Suppose there’s an organisation named XYZ Corps that goes public through an IPO. They decide to issue 10,000 shares with a par value of $1 for each share. These shares then become open to investors for a price of $15 for each share. Now, that’s quite a steep increase in the price of shares of a company that just went public, but if investors think they can profit from it, they won’t hesitate. Now, for every share sold, they earn a capital surplus. Let’s calculate the surplus for the entire 10,000 shares.
- For 10,000, the par value amount will be $1 * 10,000= $10,000
- For 10,000, the actual sale value of the shares would be #15 * 10,000= $1,50,000
- The capital surplus would be $1,50,000 – $10,000= $1,40,000
So, the company XYZ Corps earns a surplus of $1,40,000 for the sale of 10,000 shares on a balance sheet. This amount is generated as a result of excess funds that the company procured by selling the shares over the par value. The company can use this fund to finance the growth of the company, but it cannot be used as payments paid to shareholders. In essence, shareholders don’t get a penny of the excess amount and all of it belongs to the company.
Frequently Asked Questions
Capital surplus earned by the company can be invested to further the company’s base of operations and production. Also, judging the capital surplus of a company, you can tell exactly the amount of equity that is not due to retained earnings.
A lot of people tend to believe capital surplus is another word for retained earnings, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Retained earnings are profits made by the company over time, while capital surplus is the excess amount of money that the company gets when selling shares over par value.
Stated capital refers to the sum of money that is equivalent to cash consideration received by a business for issuing the shares. In essence, it is the sum total of the par value of all the shares that are still outstanding. However, capital surplus refers to the excess amount made by the company by selling shares over the par value. Stated capital and capital surplus are two completely different concepts.
The capital surplus is the amount of money that is earned by the company when they sell shares at a value that is higher than the par value. A capital deficit, on the other hand, refers to the equity that turns negative, indicating that the total value of the liabilities is higher than the value of the company’s assets.
Capital surplus on a balance sheet is the additional amount of money that the buyer of the shares pays to the company during the purchase of the shares. When the buyer purchased the shares at a value that is much higher than the par value, generating a capital surplus that shows up on the balance sheet.
Related Terms
- Market maker
- Options expiry
- Payment Date
- Treasury Stock Method
- Reverse stock splits
- Ticker
- Restricted strict unit
- Gordon growth model
- Stock quotes
- Shadow Stock
- Margin stock
- Dedicated Capital
- Whisper stock
- Voting Stock
- Deal Stock
- Market maker
- Options expiry
- Payment Date
- Treasury Stock Method
- Reverse stock splits
- Ticker
- Restricted strict unit
- Gordon growth model
- Stock quotes
- Shadow Stock
- Margin stock
- Dedicated Capital
- Whisper stock
- Voting Stock
- Deal Stock
- Microcap stock
- Multi-bagger Stocks
- Shopped stock
- Secondary stocks
- Screen stocks
- Quarter stock
- Orphan stock
- One-decision stock
- Repurchase of stock
- Stock market crash
- Half stock
- Stock options
- Stock split
- Foreign exchange markets
- Stock Market
- FAANG stocks
- Unborrowable stock
- Joint-stock company
- Over-the-counter stocks
- Watered stock
- Zero-dividend preferred stock
- Bid price
- Authorised shares
- Auction markets
- Market capitalisation
- Arbitrage
- Market capitalisation rate
- Garbatrage
- Autoregressive
- Stockholder
- Penny stock
- Noncyclical Stocks
- Hybrid Stocks
- Large Cap Stocks
- Mid Cap Stocks
- Common Stock
- Preferred Stock
- Small Cap Stocks
- Earnings Per Share (EPS)
- Diluted Earnings Per Share
- Dividend Yield
- Cyclical Stock
- Blue Chip Stocks
- Averaging Down
Most Popular Terms
Other Terms
- Direct market access
- Deficit interest
- Strong order book
- Economic calendar
- EPS forecast
- Fiat money
- Adjusted distributed income
- International securities exchanges
- Settlement currency
- Federal funds rate
- Active Tranche
- Convertible Securities
- Synthetic ETF
- Physical ETF
- Initial Public Offering
- Buyback
- Secondary Sharing
- Bookrunner
- Notional amount
- Negative convexity
- Jumbo pools
- Inverse floater
- Forward Swap
- Underwriting risk
- Reinvestment risk
- Final Maturity Date
- Secondary Market
- Margin Requirement
- Mark-to-market
- Pledged Asset
- Yield Pickup
- Subordinated Debt
- Trailing Stops
- Stochastic Oscillator
- Bullet Bonds
- Basket Trade
- Contrarian Strategy
- Exchange Control
- Notional Value
- Relevant Cost
- Dow Theory
- Speculation
- Stub
- Trading Volume
- Going Long
- Pink sheet stocks
- Rand cost averaging
- Sustainable investment
- Stop-limit sell order
- Economic Bubble
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