in a simple term Paid-up capital is the amount of money a
company has received from shareholders in
exchange for shares of stock. Paid-up capital is only created when a company
sells its shares on the primary market directly
to investors. When shares are bought and sold between investors on the secondary market,
no additional paid-up capital is created because the proceeds of those
transactions go to the selling shareholders, not the issuing company.
BREAKING DOWN 'Paid-Up Capital'
Paid-up capital, also called paid-in capital or contributed capital,
is comprised of two funding sources: the par value of stock and additional
paid-in capital. Each share of stock is issued with a base price, called its
par. Typically, this value is quite low, often less than $1. Any amount paid by
investors that exceeds the par value is considered additional paid-in capital,
or paid-in capital in excess of par. On the balance sheet,
the par value of issued shares is
listed as common stock or preferred stockunder
the shareholder equity section, depending on the type of stock issued.
For example, if a company issues 100 shares of
common stock with a par value of $1 and sells them for $50 each, the
shareholders' equity of the balance sheet shows paid-up capital totaling
$5,000, comprised of $100 of common stock and $4,900 of additional paid-in
capital.
Paid-Up vs. Authorized Capital
When a company wants to raise equity, it cannot simply sell
off pieces of the company to the highest bidder.
Businesses must request permission to issue public shares by filing an
application with the agency responsible for the registration of companies in
the country of incorporation. In the United States, companies wanting to
"go public" must register with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) before issuing an initial public offering
(IPO).
The maximum amount of capital a company is given permission
to raise via the sale of stock is called its authorized capital. Typically, the
amount of authorized capital a company applies for is much higher than its
current need so it can easily sell additional shares down the road if it has
need of additional equity. Since paid-up capital is only generated by the sale
of shares, the amount of paid-up capital can never exceed the authorized
capital.
Importance of Paid-Up Capital
Paid-up capital represents money that is not borrowed. A
company that is fully paid-up has sold all available shares, and thus cannot
increase its capital unless it borrows money by taking on debt or gets
authorization to sell more shares. A company's paid-up capital figure
represents the extent to which it depends on equity financing to
fund its operations. This figure can be compared to the company's level of debt
to assess if it has a healthy balance of financing given its operations, business model and
the prevailing standards in its industry
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