How to Account for Additional Paid-in-Capital (APIC)

APIC, What is Additional Paid-in-Capital?According to the May 2019 Financial Stability Report from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, there was more than $15 billion in outstanding commercial credit. While there are many ways companies can obtain funding, additional paid-in-capital (APIC) is one way to accomplish this goal.

Defining APIC

This term refers to the gap between a share’s par value and the distribution price. If an investor pays more than what the company sets for its IPO price offer, that is what determines APIC.

Defining Par Value

Par value is the initial offer price a publicly traded company decides to offer shares to investors during its initial public offering (IPO) on exchanges. Depending on the actual initial price for an IPO, it can be done for publicity reasons, to reduce litigation risks and to aid in improving shareholder return on investment.

Market Value

Based on how well a publicly traded company performs, this is the prevailing price that investors assign to the share price, which varies dynamically.

Determining APIC

Calculating APIC is done as follows:

APIC = (Issue Price – Par Value) x Number of Shares Acquired by Investors

If a company establishes a stock price of $2 per share, investors can decide to bid up each share price to $3 or $7 or $20 via their purchases. If there are 2 million shares outstanding selling for a total of $44 million, the excess of $40 million (beyond the $4 million in par value) is the APIC.

Based on these circumstances, a company’s balance sheet should have the following entries:

– $4 million (paid-in-capital)

– $40 million (additional paid-in-capital)

When accounting for these stock purchases in this scenario, APIC is recorded on the balance sheet under the shareholder equity (SE) section. This can be seen as increasing a company’s bottom line because it results in them receiving additional cash from stockholders.

When it comes to recording the journal entry, the total cash generated by the IPO is recorded as an asset (debit) on the balance sheet, while the common stock and APIC are recorded as equity (credits).

Utility

The utility metric can yield a considerable amount of a business’ share capital, prior to retained earnings starting to accumulate. It helps provide a financial cushion for the company if retained earnings demonstrate a shortfall.

Companies that issue shares permit the business to not increase its fixed costs. Since this method is chosen instead of issuing bonds, there are no interest payments due to buyers of the bonds. Investors are not due any payments, including no dividend obligations. Business assets are also not subject to investor claims. Once shares are issued to investors, the generated funds are non-restricted, so the company can direct the funds as necessary.

APIC lets businesses produce money without any required assets backing the transaction. Depending on the company’s future performance, buying stock at the IPO can generate massive returns.

Further considerations

When there are additional share offerings post IPO, either common or preferred shares, the APIC levels may grow, necessitating them to be documented on the business’s financial statements. If share repurchases are made, levels can be decreased.

While each business has many options to raise money, if a company uses this method, it’s important to ensure that they are accounted for properly. As always, contact a professional to ensure the best personalized advice.

Financing Via Off-Balance Sheet Options

Off-Balance Sheet Options, Off-Balance Sheet Financing (OBSF)When it comes to business needs, securing financing is a top priority, particularly when starting out or for ongoing needs such as making payroll or paying for inventory. This financing could include a loan or securing an ongoing credit line, and businesses can do that through Off-Balance Sheet Financing (OBSF).

Defining OBSF

Off-Balance Sheet Financing is an accounting practice whereby businesses document liabilities or assets on their books but do not reflect them on their balance sheet. It’s important to note that while they’re not reflected on the business’ balance sheet, if their disclosure meets generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), it’s legal. If select transactions aren’t on the company’s balance sheet, these transactions are generally found in a company’s financial statements via notes. If, however, company employees conceal material information from investors, then it becomes illegal. As the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) lay out, financial statements also may contain references to lease expenses, rentals, or partnerships.

Why Companies Use OBSF

Businesses use this type of accounting to manage their debt usage. Along with reducing interest rates for commercial loans, businesses can lower their leverage and debt-to-equity ratios, reducing the chances of default and encouraging outside investment. This is even more advantageous to help companies obtain financing if they have debt covenants.   

In reaction to the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s (FASB) discovery of operating leases regarding OBSF of more than $1.25 trillion for lease accounting, it changed the requirement for OBSF in February 2016 to mandate U.S. public companies to record “right-of-use assets and liabilities from leases on balance sheets” per 2016-02 ASC 842, coming into force in 2019. Based on the publication “Accounting Standards Update No 2016-02 Leases (Topic 842) p. 1,” footnotes were mandated for greater transparency.

How OBSF Works

OBSF moves select assets, liabilities, or transactions away from their balance sheets. It’s done to attract investors or when a company has a ton of debt yet needs to borrow additional capital to fund operations. This can provide companies with more favorable lending rates. Such transactions are either moved to subsidiaries or via special purpose vehicles. The questionable assets are still there but are simply listed on related monetary documentation.

Depending on how the company proceeds, it can include entities that the parent company has a minority ownership stake in. This may include special purpose vehicles (SPV) that take on assets and liabilities, along with other entities such as joint ventures and research and development (R&D) partnerships.

Conclusion

When it comes to R&D partnerships, since R&D is capital-intensive and requires a long time for completion, OBSF is financially advantageous. It permits a company to reduce its liability over the research time since there are no substantive assets to help even out the liability. Industries such as healthcare can see benefits.

Another advantage of OBSF is that when an operating lease is used, it can create liquidity since capital is not tied up in purchasing equipment, and rental expenses are the only financial outflows.

When done according to GAAP guidelines and state and federal laws, companies that use OBSF can maximize their financial landscape.

A Look at the Nonaccrual Experience Method

Nonaccrual Experience MethodWhen it comes to running a business, having outstanding invoices that turn into uncollectible receivables or simply bad debt is a fact of life. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has a safe harbor that permits businesses to reduce consideration of such bad debt from taxation if it qualifies. However, understanding how to determine if a business is eligible is essential to making the most of it when a business files its taxes.

Defining the Nonaccrual Experience Method (NAE)

When businesses perform a service, they expect to be paid. However, they sometimes have unpaid invoices that are uncollectible. One provision within the IRS’s Internal Revenue Code (IRC) is that of the nonaccrual experience method (NAE) and how it intersects with bad debts.

How It Works      

Once a company sees bad debt in its system after customers fail to pay their invoices, it calculates the amounts it projects it won’t be able to collect. Projecting bad debt is accomplished by the company looking at previous experiences with its payees. It’s important to note that this accounting is used by businesses for only a portion of their projected uncollectable customer bad debt; businesses similarly project the remaining percentage they expect to collect from outstanding invoices in the future.   

One important step for businesses to determine their eligibility for relief from the accrual segment of uncollectible revenue, per the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC), is by determining their industry classification. Sample industries include legal professionals, engineers, performance art professionals, architects, and actuaries.

It’s important to note that if businesses don’t use this method, they may charge off such debts. Charge-offs are when a company writes the debt off its balance sheet and expenses the uncollectible funds on the income statement. Companies must also adhere to the following criteria to take advantage of the safe harbor:

  • The company must currently use the accrual method of accounting when recording revenues, and not the cash method to account for revenue.
  • The company, in a single year, within the past 36 months, has earned up to, but no more than $5 million in gross receipts.

IRS Guidance

Beginning in September 2011, the Internal Revenue Service permitted taxpayers to use the NAE method to determine applicability by applying a factor of 95 percent to their allowance for bad debts via their past 60 months of financial documents. This permits businesses to exclude qualifying uncollectible revenues from their taxable income, which is beneficial for lowering the amount of taxes owed. It is often easier for NAE-specific designated industries to qualify; however, only companies with the appropriate amount of historical information to substantiate are eligible.

Further Considerations and Conclusion

One example of this safe harbor includes having financial information that’s expertly tracked for the past 60 months via financial statements. If the company can’t substantiate it, they won’t be able to qualify. Similarly, eligible services provided or the resulting receivables that have interest and/or financial penalties attached are ineligible.

When it comes to navigating the IRS code, the NAE can provide another way for eligible companies to maximize filings and tax obligations.

Capitalizing Versus Expensing Research and Development

Capitalizing Versus Expensing Research and DevelopmentBased on statistics from the World Bank, the United States government spent 3.59 percent of its 2022 gross domestic product on research and development. While private businesses spend on their own research and development costs, it’s important for businesses to treat these expenditures appropriately.

When it comes to research and development outlays, U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) dictate that businesses must expense them during the identical fiscal year as they’re consumed. Accordingly, this creates difficulties for investors and business owners alike in two ways. The first is more uncertain profitability and loss projections. The second is a murkier ability to quantify their rates of return on assets and investments.  

If R&D capitalization is minimal or non-existent by a company, it can imply the business’ total assets (or its total invested capital) doesn’t accurately represent how much has been put into such assets. This will affect the business’ Return on Assets (ROA) and Return on Invested Capital (ROIC). This illustrates the importance in differences of how businesses treat their R&D expenses – using the balance sheet to capitalize and the income statement to expense.

Accounting Standards

Per International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), research outlays are classified as expenses annually, like GAAP. However, development costs may be capitalized for businesses with assets under incubation for saleable purposes (in other words, the tech/IP is expected to be approved and produce revenue in the future).

One consideration with IFRS is that a portion of research and development costs may be capitalized or recorded as an asset on the business’ balance sheet, instead of classified as an expense on the Profit and Loss Statement. It’s important, though, to understand that judgment is in the eye of the classification as to how commercially viable a product or service will be in the future, potentially causing issues on the company’s financial statements. Since research and development is sporadic, it impacts a business’ profitability. It’s seen in certain sectors, such as consumer discretionary, healthcare, and technology, to highlight a few.

With revenue, cash flow, and profit expected from the long-term investment of research and development, for products or services with a realistic chance, it should be capitalized and not expensed. Investors need to be aware of the differences in how businesses capitalize or expense their research and development spending, since, without additional financial analysis, it’s important to factor in research and development equally. This is because companies that don’t capitalize experience more unstable earnings.

Exploring Capitalization Versus Expensing

To determine the value and to capitalize such assets, analysts must project the asset’s lifespan to produce benefits (over its economic life) and go with that projection for the amortization period.

Amortization life varies between assets and is based on the economic life of the particular asset. Ways to determine the economic life depend on both the asset’s patentability and/or salability. If there’s a pharmaceutical drug with a 20-year patent, it’ll likely have a much longer life than the next mobile device or graphic processing unit (GPU).

Assuming an asset has a life of six years, the business would amortize equally over the six-year time frame. There can be a multitude of amortization approaches, but the straight-line method is used for the capitalized research and development expenses. It assumes the following figures:

$200,000 spent on R&D

$40,000 residual value

Based on the difference of $160,000 and the six-year economic life, each year would result in approximately $26,666 in amortization expense. After six years, the resulting value would be $40,000 in residual value.

Conclusion

Understanding the importance of accounting for R&D outlays is helpful for businesses to maximize investments for competitiveness and financial compliance.

How to Account for Debit Notes

What are Debit Notes?With the global digital payments market expected to see north of $20 trillion in transaction value in 2025, according to Statista, business-to-business transactions are undoubtedly going to see some action. Debit notes are one tool that businesses have to record their transactions and corresponding payments. Understanding what debit notes are and how they work is essential for a smooth transaction.

Defining Debit Notes

A debit note is a form that advises a vendor’s customer of any outstanding balances owed. It can either let the customer know of an upcoming invoice or advise them of an outstanding payment. Similarly, customers can use debit notes to document the return of goods that are damaged or otherwise unsatisfactory, including the projected credit for a future order.

Understanding Debit Note Uses

Debit notes are used between commercial entities through transactions that involve the supplier sending the customer goods before payment is made. Although the goods have physically moved and payment hasn’t been remitted until an invoice is sent and ultimately satisfied by the customer, a debit note communicates that the merchant has debited the customer’s ledger.

While it’s primarily used by companies that either produce goods or act as warehouse operators, if a business sublets some of its warehouse space, debit notes can communicate upcoming bills to its commercial tenants, even though it’s not its primary business. They can also be used by businesses to fix invoice mistakes. If overbilling has occurred, a debit note can be used to correct the imbalance.

These documents can provide a window for the customer to send back the goods before payment is submitted. It can be as simple as using a postcard to document the outstanding debt to the buyer. While it’s completely optional and only used by certain businesses, buyers can request one for their own record-keeping purposes. Usually used by commercial or business-to-business entities, a debit note (or credit note) is entered into the business’ accounting records to track amounts due.

It’s important to distinguish the differences between a debit note and a credit note. Debit notes add to the purchaser’s liability and inform the purchaser of their new debt to the vendor. In contrast, credit notes lower the buyer’s liability, permitting the buyer to know the scope and amount of the credit for damaged or unsatisfactory goods.

Another reason a debit note is issued is when an order is modified. Other circumstances might include if goods are damaged during production or in transit before inspection (conducted by the vendor); a buyer declines an order; there is a need to correct an order; or a credit note pays for the bill’s value.

Differences with an Invoice

While a debit note communicates the status of a future payment or adjustment to an order, invoices are more detailed. Invoices include the sales details, goods/services provided, individual unit prices, the complete cost, and the contact information for the seller and buyer.

Illustrating How It Works

Let’s say a business uses its credit line to buy 100,000 widgets from another company at an agreed-upon purchase price of $2 each. The supplier drops off the 100,000 widgets and remits the invoice for $200,000 to the business. However, the business received 20,000 widgets in unsatisfactory condition (damaged, etc.).

When this happens, the purchasing company creates a debit note and sends it to the supplier upon receipt of the damaged 20,000 widgets. This action will lead to an adjustment, debiting the amount owed of $40,000.

In this case, the transactions will be accounted for as follows:

n  Seller debits its accounts receivable by $40,000

n  Buyer will credit its accounts payable for $40,000

While this demonstrates how it works, it also shows that debit notes can be powerful tools for both buyers and sellers.

Conclusion

When it comes to debit notes, businesses and commercial customers of other businesses can leverage this tool to ensure they’re adjusting current and future orders.