Additional Paid In Capital

  

Categories: Accounting, IPO, Banking

An accounting concept that measures the amount a company raises from a stock sale above what the stock was worth when it was first issued.

So if a company sells stock in an initial public offering at $10 per share, and then the price rises to $15 per share, that extra $5 per share gets booked as additional paid-in capital. A gift. Like the booties mom throws in to the Christmas package as an extra to the sweater and underwear packs.

This concept only applies when the company sells shares at a higher price than the original issuing amount (this initial price is known as the "par value" for the stock). It also only comes into play when the shares are sold to raise capital. If both those conditions apply, the value of the shares above the par value is booked as additional paid-in capital on the firm's financial statements.

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taking out a loan or mortgage of four hundred grand over the next eight years

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you pay down that mortgage to be just three hundred grand and in the mean time [A payment chart graph]

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the value of your house has grown to seven hundred grand

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day all right what's your equity ownership in the house worth well you

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have seven hundred grand as the price of the thing you own you have three hundred

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grand in loans against it so if you sell you have to pay back the loans generally

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speaking and you're left with four hundred grand as the value of the equity

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you have in your home so let's spin things differently instead of the bank [A number wheel spinning]

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[Bank shakes a womans hand] a co investing equity player well together you buy a condominium for 250

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grand with you putting down 100k and the bank putting down 150 K both in equity

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debt partner or lender so when you bought the condo you owned a hundred

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60% nothing changed your ownership stakes remained flat at forty sixty so now

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at 500 K you sell and you keep 40 percent or two hundred thousand dollars

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partner you would have probably paid off $50,000 or so of that loan in the ten

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years you had it so you'd owe a remaining hundred

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thousand dollars but you'd have sold it for the same five hundred grand and

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