Health Systems Inc. is considering a 10 percent stock dividend. The capital accounts are as follows: |
Common stock (4,000,000 shares at $10 par) | $ 40,000,000 | |
Capital in excess of par* | 25,000,000 | |
Retained earnings | 45,000,000 | |
Net worth | $110,000,000 | |
*The increase in capital in excess of par as a result of a stock dividend is equal to the shares created times (Market price – Par value).
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The company’s stock is selling for $16 per share. The company had total earnings of $8,000,000 with 4,000,000 shares outstanding and earnings per share were $2.00. The firm has a P/E ratio of 8.
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a. |
What adjustments would have to be made to the capital accounts for a 10 percent stock dividend? Show the new capital accounts. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Input your answers in dollars, not millions (e.g. $1,230,000).)
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Common stock | $ | |
Capital in excess of par | ||
Retained earnings | ||
Net worth | $ | |
b. |
What adjustments would be made to EPS and the stock price? (Assume the P/E ratio remains constant.) (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answers to 2 decimal places.)
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EPS | $ | |
Stock price | $ | |
c. |
How many shares would an investor have if he or she originally had 70? (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answer to the nearest whole share.)
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Number of shares |
d. |
What is the investor’s total investment worth before and after the stock dividend if the P/E ratio remains constant? (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answers to the nearest whole dollar.)
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Total Investment | ||
Before stock dividend | $ | |
After stock dividend | $ | |
e. |
Assume Mr. Heart, the president of Health Systems, wishes to benefit stockholders by keeping the cash dividend at a previous level of $1.15 in spite of the fact that the stockholders how have 10 percent more shares. Because the cash dividend is not reduced, the stock price is assumed to remain at $16.
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What is an investor’s total investment worth after the stock dividend if he/she had 70 shares before the stock dividend?
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Total investment | $ |
f. | Under the scenario described in part e, is the investor better off? |
Yes |
g. |
As a final question, what is the dividend yield on this stock under the scenario described in part e?(Input your answer as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places.)
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Dividend yield | % |
Explanation:
a.
After a 10 percent stock dividend: |
Number of new shares | = Dividend percent × Number of shares outstanding |
= .10 × 4,000,000 | |
= 400,000 shares |
Common stock | = Number of shares outstanding × Par value per share |
= (4,000,000 + 400,000) × $10 | |
= $44,000,000 |
Capital in excess of par | = Original account balance + [Number of new shares × (Stock price − Par value)] |
= $25,000,000 + [400,000 × ($16 − 10] | |
= $27,400,000 |
Retained earnings | = Original account balance − (Number of new shares × Stock price) |
= $45,000,000 − (400,000 × $16) | |
= $38,600,000 |
A stock dividend increases the common stock and capital in excess of par account values and decreases retained earnings. Total equity is unchanged. |
b.
Post-split earnings per share | = Earnings / Number of shares |
= $8,000,000 / (4,000,000 + 400,000) | |
= $1.82 |
Post-split price | = Price-earnings ratio × Earnings per share |
= 8 × $1.82 | |
= $14.55 |
c.
Post-split investor shares | = Original shares × (1 + Dividend percent) |
= 70 × (1 + .10) | |
= 77 shares |
d.
Pre-split investment value | = Pre-split stock price × Pre-split shares |
= $16 × 70 | |
= $1,120 |
Post-split investment value | = Post-split stock price × Post-split shares |
= $14.55 × 77 | |
= $1,120 |
e.
Investment value | = Stock price × Post-split shares |
= $16 × 77 | |
= $1,232 |
f.
Yes. As a result of keeping the cash dividend constant, the stockholder not only received more cash dividends, but the portolio value also increased as a result of having more shares. |
g.
Dividend yield | = Dividend / Stock price |
= $1.15 / $16 | |
= .0719, or 7.19% |
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