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Referred to as paid-in capital.
The portion corporate profits paid out of stockholders is A dividend is quarterly payment to stockholders of record, as a return on investment. Dividends may be in cash, stock, or property, and are declared from operating surplus. If there is no surplus, the payment is considered a return on capital. Dividend payments are, in effect, taxed twice-once when corporate profits are taxed and again when the dividend is received by a taxpaying stockholder. The corporate profits paid out to stockholders is called dividends.
If a corporation pays out all of its cash in dividends, it may put itself in a position where it does not have enough cash to pay the loan payments to the bank. Excessive dividends may also be an indication that the management of the corporation does not have good judgment about retaining sufficient capital in the corporation to meet corporate capital needs.
Progress payments can show a shortfall in projected cash flow. This is because the company is making payments at intervals prior to having the project in place to provide cash inflow.
This is what I found on internet. Payments made in cash or property to a corporation by its stockholders either to buy capital stock, to pay an assessment on the capital stock, or as a gift. Also called paid-in capital. The contributed or paid-in capital of a corporation is made up of capital stock and capital (or contributed) surplus, which is contributed (or paid-in) capital in excess of http://www.answers.com/topic/par value or http://www.answers.com/topic/stated-value. Donated capital and http://www.answers.com/topic/donated-surplus are freely given forms of contributed (paid-in) capital, but http://www.answers.com/topic/donated-stock refers to fully paid (previously issued) capital stock that is given as a gift to the issuing corporation.
Referred to as paid-in capital.
The portion corporate profits paid out of stockholders is A dividend is quarterly payment to stockholders of record, as a return on investment. Dividends may be in cash, stock, or property, and are declared from operating surplus. If there is no surplus, the payment is considered a return on capital. Dividend payments are, in effect, taxed twice-once when corporate profits are taxed and again when the dividend is received by a taxpaying stockholder. The corporate profits paid out to stockholders is called dividends.
A general cash offer
They do not.
petty cash
expenses paid with cash
Cash Book
What was used was called Bounties.
If a corporation pays out all of its cash in dividends, it may put itself in a position where it does not have enough cash to pay the loan payments to the bank. Excessive dividends may also be an indication that the management of the corporation does not have good judgment about retaining sufficient capital in the corporation to meet corporate capital needs.
Progress payments can show a shortfall in projected cash flow. This is because the company is making payments at intervals prior to having the project in place to provide cash inflow.
Purchases journal is used to record purchases on account while Cash payment journal is used to record purchases for cash and cash payments.
no