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Treasury Stock

By Niti GuptaNiti Gupta

Home » Finance » Blog » Corporate Finance Basics » Treasury Stock

Treasury Stock

Definition of Treasury Stock

Treasury stocks are shares which a company buys back or repurchase from its already issued shares to the public. Or sometimes these shares are kept in the company’s kitty from the start and are never issued to the public at all. The principle is that these shares or stocks remain in the company’s own treasury and that is why the name, treasury stock is given to such shares.

Explanation

When a company buys back the shares or avail the option of treasury stock, the number of shares in the market is reduced. Therefore, treasury stock is also known as a contra equity account. Also, treasury stocks result in a decrease inthe outstanding number of shares in the open market, therefore these shares are not included in the distribution of dividends or the calculation of earnings per share.

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It are also excluded from voting rights since they are no longer issued to the general public. The number of shares that a company can repurchase as treasury stocks or keep in its own treasury is mostly regulated by a national regulatory authority in different countries. These stocks are repurchased by the company to be kept in reserve for future investments, improving financial ratios or sometimes for maintaining controlling interest.

How to Record Treasury Stock

They are two methods of recording treasury stock:

1. Cost Method

The cost method ignores the par value of the share of the company. Under the cost method, if the treasury stock is purchased, the following entry is passed with the actual amount of purchase.

Dr Treasury stock (Repurchase amount)
Cr Cash(Repurchase amount)

When these shares are sold at a later stage, the following entry is passed:

Case: Sales consideration exceeds the cost of purchase

Dr Cash (Amount received)
Cr Treasury stock (Repurchase amount)
Cr Additional paid-in capital (Difference)

Case: Sales consideration is less than the cost of purchase

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Dr Cash (Amount received)
Dr Additional paid-in capital (Balance available)
Dr Retained earnings (Difference if any)
Cr Treasury stock (Repurchase amount)

If the amount in additional paid-in capital is not sufficient then only the balance amount is charged to retained earnings.

2. Par Value Method

Under the par value method, the following entry is passed at the time of repurchase:

Dr Treasury stock (Par Value)
Dr Additional paid-in capital (Difference)
Cr Cash (Repurchase amount)

Here, the paid-in capital is debited to reduce the value by the excess amount to par value which was received at the time of the issue of the share. When such shares are reissued, the same is accounted for as the normal issue of shares.

Example of Treasury Stock

XYZ limited had 1,000 shares in the open market at the par value of $2 per share and each share had been issued at a value of $22. The company after analysis of the market and other factors found that their shares are undervalued, and therefore decided to repurchase 500 shares at $30 per share for a total value of $15,000.

Solution:

Now in this case,

  • Common stock at par value $2 × 1,000 = $2,000
  • Additional paid-in capital (APIC) = ($22-$2) × 1,000 = $20,000

The repurchase or buyback will create a contra equity account:

  • Cost method: Treasury stock will be debited by $15,000 and cash will be credited by $15,000.
  • Par value method: Treasury stock will be debited by par value i.e. (500 X $2) $1,000, APIC will be debited by the excess to par value i.e. (500 x $28) $14,000, and cash will be credited by $15,000 as agreed.

Treasury Stock Journal Entry

We have already seen the journal entries to be passed at the time of repurchase of treasury stock and their subsequent sale. Let us understand the journal entries in a case when the entity decides not to issue back these shares and instead retire them permanently.

Dr Additional paid-in capital
Cr Treasury stock

Accounting for Treasury Stock

Apart from the above points, there is one more thing to keep in mind while doing accounting for treasury stock i.e. in either of the method, cost or par value method, treasury stock transactions do not impact retained earnings.

The only other account which is impacted apart from treasury stock or contra equity account is paid-in capital account. Most of the time auditors look for this type of errors in the financial statements of the companies.

Advantages

Some of the advantages are given below:

  • It help companies keep funds in reserve for future investment purposes such as acquisition, purchase of equipment, etc.
  • It helps companies in maintaining controlling interest.
  • It helps in boosting the undervalued share price in the market.
  • Companies buy back shares to improve financial ratios like return on asset and return on equity. This happens because treasury stocks are not included in the number of outstanding shares in the open market.

Limitations

Some of the disadvantages are given below:

  • Treasury stocks do not have voting rights entitlements.
  • Treasury stocks are not included in the distribution of dividends.
  • They are not included in calculating the number of outstanding shares in the open market, thus not included in the calculation of earnings per share.
  • In case of liquidation, treasury stocks do not receive anything from the net assets remaining,
  • There are different laws that regulate the treasury stocks phenomenon in different companies like there is a maximum limit which should not be exceeded by the companies when they buy back treasury stock.

Conclusion

It is similar to shares that are not issued to the general public in the open market; these shares reduce the share capital on the balance sheet and are shown as a negative number under the contra equity account. The method helps in maintaining the price of undervalued shares of the company which generally leads to hostile takeovers from competitors.

Recommend ed Articles

This is a guide to Treasury Stock. Here we also discuss the definition and how to record treasury stock? along with advantages and disadvantages. You may also have a look at the following articles to learn more –

  1. Treasury Bills vs Bonds
  2. Cash and Cash Equivalents
  3. Stocks vs Mutual Funds
  4. Stocks vs Shares
  5. Stock Market Trading
  6. Financial Assets

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