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GROUPWORK (Computation of Basic and Diluted EPS) Charles Austin of the controller’s office of Thompson

Corporation was given the assignment of determining the basic and diluted earnings per share values for the year ending

December 31, 2018. Austin has compiled the information listed below.

1. The company is authorized to issue 8,000,000 shares of \(10 par value common stock. As of December 31, 2017, 2,000,000

shares had been issued and were outstanding.

2. The per share market prices of the common stock on selected dates were as follows.

Price per Share

July 1, 2017 \)20.00

January 1, 2018 21.00

April 1, 2018 25.00

July 1, 2018 11.00

August 1, 2018 10.50

November 1, 2018 9.00

December 31, 2018 10.00

3. A total of 700,000 shares of an authorized 1,200,000 shares of convertible preferred stock had been issued on July 1, 2017.

The stock was issued at its par value of \(25, and it has a cumulative dividend of \)3 per share. The stock is convertible into

common stock at the rate of one share of convertible preferred for one share of common. The rate of conversion is to be

automatically adjusted for stock splits and stock dividends. Dividends are paid quarterly on September 30, December 31,

March 31, and June 30.

4. Thompson Corporation is subject to a 40% income tax rate.

5. The after-tax net income for the year ended December 31, 2018, was \(11,550,000.

The following specific activities took place during 2018.

1. January 1—A 5% common stock dividend was issued. The dividend had been declared on December 1, 2017, to all stockholders

of record on December 29, 2017.

2. April 1—A total of 400,000 shares of the \)3 convertible preferred stock was converted into common stock. The company

issued new common stock and retired the preferred stock. This was the only conversion of the preferred stock during 2018.

3. July 1—A 2-for-1 split of the common stock became effective on this date. The board of directors had authorized the split

on June 1.

4. August 1—A total of 300,000 shares of common stock were issued to acquire a factory building.

5. November 1—A total of 24,000 shares of common stock were purchased on the open market at \(9 per share. These shares

were to be held as treasury stock and were still in the treasury as of December 31, 2018.

6. Common stock cash dividends—Cash dividends to common stockholders were declared and paid as follows.

April 15—\)0.30 per share

October 15—$0.20 per share

7. Preferred stock cash dividends—Cash dividends to preferred stockholders were declared and paid as scheduled.

Instructions

(a) Determine the number of shares used to compute basic earnings per share for the year ended December 31, 2018.

(b) Determine the number of shares used to compute diluted earnings per share for the year ended December 31, 2018.

(c) Compute the adjusted net income to be used as the numerator in the basic earnings per share calculation for the year

ended December 31, 2018.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Number of shares used to compute earning per share and diluted earning per share are 4,951,000 and . The total adjusted income is $10, 350,000.

Step by step solution

01

Basic earnings per share

Particular

Date

Outstanding

Beginning Balance

Including 5% Stock Dividend

Jan 1-Apr 1

$2,100,000

Conversion of Preferred Stock

Apr 1- Jan 1

$2,520,000

Stock Split

July 1- Aug 1

$5,040,000

Issue Share of Building

Aug 1- Nov 1

$5,340,000

Purchase of Treasury Stock

Nov 1- Dec 1

$5,316,000

The total number of common shares to compute basic earnings per share is 4,951,000
02

Diluted earnings per share

Particular

Outstanding

Number of shares used to compute basic earnings per share

4,951,000

Convertible Preferred Stock- Still outstanding

630,000

Convertible Preferred Stock- Converted

$210,000

The total number of common shares to compute diluted earnings per share is $5,719,000
03

Adjusted net income

Particular

Amount

Amount

After Tax Net Income

$11,550,000

Preferred Stock Dividend March 31

$525,000

June 30, Sept 30, and Dec 31

$675,000

$1,200,000

Adjusted Net Income

$10,350,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

EXCEL (Stock-Option Plan) Berg Company adopted a stock-option plan on November 30, 2016, that provided that 70,000 shares of \(5 par value stock be designated as available for the granting of options to officers of the corporation at a price of \)9 a share. The market price was \(12 a share on November 30, 2017.

On January 2, 2017, options to purchase 28,000 shares were granted to president Tom Winter—15,000 for services to be rendered in 2017 and 13,000 for services to be rendered in 2018. Also on that date, options to purchase 14,000 shares were granted to vice president Michelle Bennett—7,000 for services to be rendered in 2017 and 7,000 for services to be rendered in 2018. The market price of the stock was \)14 a share on January 2, 2017. The options were exercisable for a period of one year following the year in which the services were rendered. The fair value of the options on the grant date was \(4 per option.

In 2018, neither the president nor the vice president exercised their options because the market price of the stock was below the exercise price. The market price of the stock was \)8 a share on December 31, 2018, when the options for 2017 services lapsed.

On December 31, 2019, both president Winter and vice president Bennett exercised their options for 13,000 and 7,000 shares, respectively, when the market price was $16 a share.

Instructions

Prepare the necessary journal entries in 2016 when the stock-option plan was adopted, in 2017 when options were granted, in 2018 when options lapsed, and in 2019 when options were exercised.

IFRS16-3 Norman Co., a fast-growing golf equipment company, uses GAAP. It is considering the issuance of convertible bonds. The bonds mature in 10 years, have a face value of \(400,000, and pay interest annually at a rate of 4%. The equity component of the bond issue has a fair value of \)35,000. Greg Shark is curious as to the difference in accounting for these bonds if the company were to use IFRS.

(a) Prepare the entry to record issuance of the bonds at par under GAAP.

(b) Repeat the requirement for part (a), assuming application of IFRS to the bond issuance.

(c) Which approach provides the better accounting? Explain.

What is meant by the term antidilution? Give an example.

On July 1, 2017, Roberts Corporation issued \(3,000,000 of 9% bonds payable in 20 years. The bonds include detachable warrants giving the bondholder the right to purchase for \)30 one share of \(1 par value common stock at any time during the next 10 years. The bonds were sold for \)3,000,000. The value of the warrants at the time of issuance was $100,000. Prepare the journal entry to record this transaction.

(L04) (EPS: Simple Capital Structure) Ace Company had 200,000 shares of common stock outstanding on December 31, 2018. During the year 2019, the company issued 8,000 shares on May 1 and retired 14,000 shares on October 31. For the year 2019, Ace Company reported net income of \(249,690 after a loss from discontinued operations of \)40,600 (net of tax).

Instructions

What earnings per share data should be reported at the bottom of its income statement?

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