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Cash Dividends On Common Stock
Cash Dividends On Common Stock
Cash Dividends On Common Stock
Cash dividends (usually referred to as "dividends") are a distribution of the corporation's net income.
Dividends are analogous to draws/withdrawals by the owner of a sole proprietorship. As such,
dividends are not expenses and do not appear on the corporation's income statement.
Corporations routinely need cash in order to replace inventory and other assets whose replacement
costs have increased or to expand capacity. As a result, corporations rarely distribute all of their net
income to stockholders. Young, growing corporations may pay no dividends at all, while more mature
corporations may distribute a significant percentage of their profits to stockholders as dividends.
Before dividends can be distributed, the corporation's board of directors must declare a dividend. The
date the board declares the dividend is known as the declaration date and it is on this date that the
liability for the dividend is created. Legally, corporations must have a credit balance in Retained
Earnings in order to declare a dividend. Practically, a corporation must also have a cash balance large
enough to pay the dividend and still meet upcoming needs, such as asset growth and payments on
existing liabilities.
Let's look at an example: On March 15 a board of directors approves a motion directing the corporation
to pay its regular quarterly dividend of P0.40 per share on May 1 to stockholders of record on April 15.
The following entry is made on the declaration date of March 15 assuming that 2,000 shares of
common stock are outstanding:
On May 1, when the dividends are paid, the following journal entry is made.
Dividends payable 800
Cash 800