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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And finance allah shmoop What is an i p o

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Well this is a hippo and it has nothing to

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both well actually most people just spell it out I

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po It stands for initial public offering In the three

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words tell the story and i pl refers to a

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public funding if you will Whatever dot com has forty

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million shares outstanding after three private rounds with venture capitalists

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and private investors it wants to raise money to go

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big internationally And for the first time it will offer

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shares to joe and jill public And that means that

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all of it shares will be tradable publicly on the

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open market like on nasdaq or the new york stock

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exchange That is the insiders early investors founders et cetera

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will be able to just call their broker at schwab

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or fidelity or wherever and sell their shares get liquid

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does after a nice meal So whatever dot com sells

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hundred twenty million dollars which they can spend to build

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make shares available to the public because once you've made

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