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Finance: What is Paid-In-Capital/Surplus? 11 Views
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Description:
What is paid-in-capital and capital surplus? Hit play to find out.
- Social Studies / Finance
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Transcript
- 00:00
finance a la shmoop what are paid in capital and capital surplus all right
- 00:08
well first you start with the original thousand bucks grandma gave you or [Someone taking a check]
- 00:12
rather invested in you and that's an important difference to buy 10 percent
- 00:17
of your lemonade business and note the import therefore defining paid in
- 00:21
capital that grandma is buying a slice of your lemonade stand pie representing [Piece of the pie chart is highlighted]
Full Transcript
- 00:26
10 percent ownership of your company thousand bucks for ten percent she's not
- 00:31
giving you a low interest rate loan despite her career as a collection agent [Grandma holding a rolling pin and threatening someone]
- 00:35
for the mob so the thousand dollars is equity aka
- 00:38
ownership that capital is paid in and it's likely that in order to build the
- 00:44
16,000 lemonade stand stores that you dream of you will need to attract other [Lots of lemonade stands appearing]
- 00:49
investors who will then pay in more capital to own incremental percentages [Investors handing over cash for equity]
- 00:54
of your business as your own original hundred percent ownership when you
- 00:59
founded it it's diluted down to a sum much smaller number than the 90 percent [The kids piece of the pie chart gets smaller]
- 01:03
you own after Grandmama's grand but things go well and it turns out
- 01:07
amazingly that you didn't need to sell anymore equity in your company you were
- 01:12
able to grow by taking short-term loans which you then paid off by charging five [Lemonade stand taking loans from a brokerage, investors and a bank]
- 01:17
bucks a cup for the Absinthe kicker it was a huge hit among third graders so [Kid looking tired]
- 01:22
after four years you found yourself with a hundred ninety six thousand dollars in
- 01:26
cash in your lemonade stand bank account yes you had five grand worth of cups in [ATM showing the balance]
- 01:31
inventory a bunch of sugar and some other things yes they are probably
- 01:34
convertible quickly into cash but if you converted them quickly you would also [Liquid stamp]
- 01:39
suffer a massive discount in pricing because while semi used cups or at least
- 01:44
ones that have previously been sold even if they're in their original packaging
- 01:47
while they probably don't do well on eBay so for your purposes in assessing [Cups for sale on eBay]
- 01:51
your own capital surplus here you're going to ignore inventory and all of the
- 01:56
other elements that in a big or real company well you'd have to account for [Inventory items being crossed out]
- 02:00
at least consider when you thought about how liquid your company was and yes [Kid thinking of lots of cash floating on the sea]
- 02:03
that's not a reference to the product you actually sell so of that hundred
- 02:07
ninety six thousand dollars well one hundred ninety five grand of that
- 02:11
cash was capital surplus or just capital aka cash that came in the form of [Capital surplus calculation]
- 02:17
after-tax profits that you kept in your company as you grew it from a nothing to
- 02:22
something now that's how you make the most of your seed money [A hole being dug and seeds being planted]
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