Contributed Capital

Contributed Capital

Contributed capital, also known as paid-in capital, is the cash and other assets that shareholders have given a company in exchange for stock. The par value is merely an accounting value of each of the shares to be offered and is not equivalent to the market value that investors are willing to pay. When companies repurchase shares and return capital to shareholders, the shares bought back are listed at their repurchase price, which reduces shareholders' equity. Contributed capital, also known as paid-in capital, is the cash and other assets that shareholders have given a company in exchange for stock. This is the price that shareholders paid for their stake in the company. In other words, contributed capital includes the par value — or nominal value — of the stock, found in the common stock account, and the amount of money over and above the par value that shareholders were willing to pay for their shares — the share premium — found in the additional paid-in capital account. Contributed capital can be compared with additional paid-in capital, and the difference between the two values will equal the premium paid by investors over and above the par value of the company's shares. The common stock account is also known as share capital account, and the additional paid-in capital account is also known as the share premium account.

Contributed capital, also known as paid-in capital, is the cash and other assets that shareholders have given a company in exchange for stock.

What Is Contributed Capital?

Contributed capital, also known as paid-in capital, is the cash and other assets that shareholders have given a company in exchange for stock. Investors make capital contributions when a company issues equity shares based on a price that shareholders are willing to pay for them. The total amount of contributed capital or paid-in-capital represents their stake or ownership in the company.

Contributed capital may also refer to a company's balance sheet item listed under stockholders' equity, often shown alongside the balance sheet entry for additional paid-in capital.

Contributed capital, also known as paid-in capital, is the cash and other assets that shareholders have given a company in exchange for stock.
This is the price that shareholders paid for their stake in the company.
Contributed capital is reported in the shareholder’s equity section of the balance sheet and usually split into two different accounts: common stock and additional paid-in capital account.

Understanding Contributed Capital

Contributed capital is the total value of the stock that shareholders have bought directly from the issuing company. It includes the money from initial public offerings (IPOs), direct listings, direct public offerings, and secondary offerings — including issues of preferred stock. It also includes the receipt of fixed assets in exchange for stock and the reduction of a liability in exchange for stock.

Contributed capital can be compared with additional paid-in capital, and the difference between the two values will equal the premium paid by investors over and above the par value of the company's shares. The par value is merely an accounting value of each of the shares to be offered and is not equivalent to the market value that investors are willing to pay.

When companies repurchase shares and return capital to shareholders, the shares bought back are listed at their repurchase price, which reduces shareholders' equity.

Preferred shares sometimes have par values that are more than marginal, but most common shares today have par values of just a few pennies. Because of this, "additional paid-in capital" tends to be representative of the total paid-in capital figure and is sometimes shown by itself on the balance sheet.

Capital Contributions

It's important to distinguish that capital contributions, which are an injection of cash into a company, can come in other forms besides the sale of equity shares. For example, an owner might take out a loan and use the proceeds to make a capital contribution to the company. Businesses can also receive capital contributions in the form of non-cash assets such as buildings and equipment. These scenarios are all types of capital contributions and increase owners' equity. However, the term contributed capital is typically reserved for the amount of money received from issuing shares and not other forms of capital contributions.

Calculating Contributed Capital

Contributed capital is reported in the shareholder’s equity section of the balance sheet and usually split into two different accounts: common stock and additional paid-in capital account. In other words, contributed capital includes the par value — or nominal value — of the stock, found in the common stock account, and the amount of money over and above the par value that shareholders were willing to pay for their shares — the share premium — found in the additional paid-in capital account.

The common stock account is also known as share capital account, and the additional paid-in capital account is also known as the share premium account.

Example of Contributed Capital

For example, a company issues 5,000 $1 par value shares to investors. The investors pay $10 a share, so the company raises $50,000 in equity capital. As a result, the company records $5,000 to the common stock account and $45,000 to the paid-in capital in excess of par. Both of these accounts added together equal the total amount stockholders were willing to pay for their shares. In other words, the contributed capital equals $50,000.

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Additional Paid-In Capital (APIC)

Additional paid-in capital is the excess amount paid by an investor above the par value price of a stock during an initial public offering (IPO). read more

Expanded Accounting Equation

The expanded accounting equation is derived from the accounting equation and illustrates the different components of stockholder equity in a company. read more

Paid-In Capital

Paid-in capital is the capital paid in by investors during common or preferred stock issuances. Learn how paid-in capital impacts a company’s balance sheet. read more

Par Value

Par value can refer to either the face value of a bond or the stock value stated in the corporate charter. read more

Share Premium Account

A share premium account appears on the balance sheet, and is the amount of money paid for a share above the cost of the share.  read more

Stated Value

A stated value is an amount assigned to a corporation's stock for accounting purposes when the stock has no par value.  read more

Stock Dividend

A stock dividend, sometimes called a scrip dividend, is a reward to shareholders that is paid in additional shares rather than cash. read more

Treasury Stock (Treasury Shares)

Treasury stock is previously outstanding stock bought back from stockholders by the issuing company. read more