Example 15 (CFA Curriculum, FRA, SS8)
For the year ended 31 December 2009, Bright-Warm Utility Company had net income of $1,750,000. The company had an average of 500,000 shares of common stock outstanding, 20,000 shares of convertible preferred, and no other potentially dilutive securities. Each share of preferred pays a dividend of $10 per share, and each is convertible into five shares of the company’s common stock. Calculate the company’s basic and diluted EPS.
(Institute)
Institute, CFA. 2016 CFA Level I Volume 3 Financial Reporting and Analysis. CFA Institute, 07/2015. VitalBook file.
The citation provided is a guideline. Please check each citation for accuracy before use.
My solution to the problem:
Basic EPS= (1,750,000-200,000)/(500,000+20,000)
But, the solution in the book is:
Basic EPS= (1,750,000-200,000)/(500,000)
Why is it that prefered stocks are not taken into denominator? It doesn’t make sense to pay out dividend and yet not take into account the prefered stock in weighted average number of shares.
For the year ended 31 December 2009, Bright-Warm Utility Company had net income of $1,750,000. The company had an average of 500,000 shares of common stock outstanding, 20,000 shares of convertible preferred, and no other potentially dilutive securities. Each share of preferred pays a dividend of $10 per share, and each is convertible into five shares of the company’s common stock. Calculate the company’s basic and diluted EPS.
(Institute)
Institute, CFA. 2016 CFA Level I Volume 3 Financial Reporting and Analysis. CFA Institute, 07/2015. VitalBook file.
The citation provided is a guideline. Please check each citation for accuracy before use.
My solution to the problem:
Basic EPS= (1,750,000-200,000)/(500,000+20,000)
But, the solution in the book is:
Basic EPS= (1,750,000-200,000)/(500,000)
Why is it that prefered stocks are not taken into denominator? It doesn’t make sense to pay out dividend and yet not take into account the prefered stock in weighted average number of shares.