dead stock
(noun)
Merchandize that had been removed from sale, now offered for sale at a later date.
Examples of dead stock in the following topics:
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Selling Orientation
- Such a modern day orientation may suit scenarios in which a firm holds dead stock, or otherwise sells a product that is in high demand, with little likelihood of changes in consumer tastes that would diminish demand.
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Accounting for Sale of Stock
- How the stock sale is accounted for depends on the type of stock sold.
- How the stock sale is accounted for depends on the type of stock sold.
- Most stock sales involve common stock or preferred stock.
- Most stock sales involve common stock or preferred stock.
- Summarize how to account for the sale of common stock, preferred stock and treasury stock
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Preferred Stock
- Preferred stock usually carries no voting rights, but may carry a dividend, have priority over common stock upon liquidation and/or have other benefits.
- In other words, in the case of liquidation or bankruptcy, preferred stock will have claim to assets before common stock, but after corporate bonds or other debt instruments.
- Preferred stock usually carries no voting rights, but may carry a dividend and may have priority over common stock in the payment of dividends and upon liquidation.
- Some examples are prior preferred stock (highest priority), preference preferred stock, convertible preferred stock (exchangeable for common stock), cumulative preferred stock, exchangeable preferred stock, participating preferred stock, putable preferred stock, monthly income preferred stock, and non-cumulative preferred stock.
- Preferred Stocks are considered a hybrid security with properties of both stocks and bonds, but are subordinate to bonds when it comes to rights of claim to company assets.
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Pricing a Security
- The price of stocks, on the other hand, depends on the value of the company.
- Those sales could be shares of stock or sales of entire firms.
- However, some companies are "worth more dead than alive," such as weakly performing companies that own many tangible assets.
- Optimists will buy more of the stock and drive the price up, while pessimists will sell and drive it down.
- Therefore, a stock's market price also takes into account expectations for the future performance of the company.
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Accounting for Preferred Stock
- Preferred stock is a class of capital stock that carries certain features or rights not carried by common stock.
- When a corporation issues both preferred and common stock, the preferred stock may be:
- Stock preferred as to assets is preferred stock that receives special treatment in liquidation.
- Convertible preferred stock is preferred stock that is convertible into common stock of the issuing corporation.
- Convertible preferred stock is uncommon, most preferred stock is nonconvertible.
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Convertible Stock
- This type of stock has an embedded option that allows it to be converted into a specified number of shares of common stock at a predetermined price; usually at a premium over the stock's market price.
- Unlike common stock, preferred shares usually have no voting rights.
- Preferred stock is reported in the stockholder's equity section as the number of shares outstanding, multiplied by the stock's market price.
- The result is divided between the value of the shares that fall under "common stock - par value" and the excess value over par is reported as "common stock - additional paid-in-capital".
- A public company's preferred stock is designated as convertible if it can be exchanged for common stock.
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The Cost of Preferred Stock
- The cost of preferred stock is equal to the preferred dividend divided by the preferred stock price, plus the expected growth rate.
- The price of a preferred stock is $100.
- The cost of preferred stock is 13%.
- This tells us that the cost of preferred stock is equal to the preferred dividend divided by the preferred stock price, plus the expected growth rate.
- The cost of preferred stock is equal to the preferred dividend divided by the preferred stock price, plus the growth rate.
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Treasury Stock
- Treasury stock is a company's issued and reacquired capital stock; the stock has not been retired and is legally available for reissuance.
- Treasury stock is the corporation's own capital stock it has issued and then reacquired.
- Because this stock has not been canceled, it is legally available for reissuance and cannot be classified as unissued stock.
- When the stock is resold, treasury stock is credited for the par value of the stock sold.
- Companies that issue common stock and reacquire it in the future, reclassify it as treasury stock.
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Common Stock
- Common stock is a form of ownership and equity, different from preferred stock, that still earns rights of ownership for its shareholders.
- "Common stock" is used primarily in the United States.
- It is called "common" to distinguish it from preferred stock.
- If both types of stock exist, common stock holders cannot be paid dividends until all preferred stock dividends (including payments in arrears) are paid in full.
- Stocks can be bought and sold on exchanges, like the New York Stock Exchange shown above.
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Common and Preferred Stock
- That being said, holders of this type of stock usually do not have voting rights, while common stock holders do.
- In general, there are four different types of preferred stock: cumulative preferred stock, non-cumulative preferred stock, participating preferred stock, and convertible preferred stock.
- Convertible preferred stock are preferred issues which holders can exchange for a predetermined number of the company's common-stock shares.
- It is a one-way deal, and an individual cannot convert the common stock back to preferred stock, if they have already exchanged their preferred stock with the company.
- Participating preferred stockholders can "double dip", and are entitled to both their money back, as well as the leftovers for common stock, proportionate to the amount of common stock for which their preferred stock can be converted into.