STOCK DIVIDENDS
Stock
Dividends
A stock dividend is a pro-rata distribution of additional shares of a company’s stock to owners of the common stock. A company may opt for stock dividends for a number of reasons including inadequate cash on hand or a desire to lower the price of the stock on a per-share basis to prompt more trading and increase liquidity (i.e., how fast an investor can turn his holdings into cash). Why does lowering the price of the stock increase liquidity? On the whole, people are more likely to buy and sell a $50 stock than a $5,000 stock; this usually results in a large number of shares trading hands each day.
corporate distribution to
shareholders declared out of profits, at the discretion of the directors of the
corporation, which is paid in the form of shares of stock, as opposed to money,
and increases the number of shares.
When a corporation declares a stock
dividend, it adds undivided profits, which cannot be used to pay dividends, to
the capital invested in the corporation, to reflect the additional shares it is
issuing. The stockholder's increased number of shares represent the same
proportion of the value of the company as the stockholder originally held (that
is, the stockholder owns the same percentage of the corporation as prior to the
declaration of the stock dividend); however, the cash value of an individual
share is not reduced.
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