When a company issues shares at a price above their nominal value, the excess amount over the nominal value is recorded as additional paid in capital on the company's balance sheet. For instance, if the par value of a share is $10 and it is issued at $15, the additional $5 is accounted for as additional paid in capital.
During the board meeting, the CFO explained that the recent share issuance resulted in a significant increase in additional paid in capital, which strengthened the company's financial position.
Deferred's AI 1031 Research Assistant is trained on 8,000+ pages of US tax law and outperforms human CPAs by 22%+
CHAT NOW