3.3 Weighted-Average Number of Shares Outstanding
3.3.1 General
ASC 260-10
Computing a Weighted-Average
55-2 The weighted-average number of shares is an arithmetical mean average of shares outstanding and assumed to be outstanding for EPS computations. The most precise average would be the sum of the shares determined on a daily basis divided by the number of days in the period. Less-precise averaging methods may be used, however, as long as they produce reasonable results. Methods that introduce artificial weighting, such as the Rule of 78 method, are not acceptable for computing a weighted-average number of shares for EPS computations.
The denominator in the calculation of basic EPS is based on the weighted-average
number of common shares outstanding during the period. The denominator for basic
EPS does not include potential common stock. As discussed in Section 3.1.1, the
determination of whether an equity security meets the ASC 260-10-20 definition
of common stock should be based on the substance of the instrument in addition
to its legal form. There may be circumstances in which (1) equity shares in the
legal form of preferred stock do not have a substantive liquidation preference
and share all of the characteristics of common stock or (2) an equity security
represents a common equity instrument in legal form but has a substantive
liquidation preference and other characteristics of preferred stock. If an
equity security represents preferred stock in legal form but has all the
characteristics of common stock in its current form, it should be considered an
outstanding share of common stock in the calculation of basic EPS. Similarly, if
an equity security represents common stock in legal form but has all the
characteristics of preferred stock in its current form, it should not be
considered an outstanding share of common stock in the calculation of basic EPS.
In the situations discussed in the preceding two sentences, an entity may be
required to use the two-class method of calculating basic EPS.
In addition to evaluating whether an equity security meets the definition of common stock, an entity must consider a number of other matters in determining the number of shares of common stock included in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS. Those matters include the following:
3.3.2 Determining Whether Common Shares Are Outstanding
Questions may arise about whether certain types of equity securities should be considered outstanding shares of common stock in the calculation of the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding.
3.3.2.1 Redeemable Common Stock
Shares of redeemable common stock that are legally issued and outstanding should be considered outstanding in the calculation of the weighted-average number of common shares outstanding since such shares represent common stock in both legal form and substance. The only exceptions are if (1) the shares have been legally issued but are subject to vesting conditions under the accounting guidance for share-based payment awards or (2) the shares meet the definition of a mandatorily redeemable financial instrument in ASC 480 and are classified as a liability. See also Example 3-20.
3.3.2.2 Mandatorily Convertible Instruments
An entity may have issued instruments that are mandatorily convertible into common stock. These instruments could include preferred stock or debt that is mandatorily convertible into common stock at a future date or common stock that is mandatorily convertible into another class of common stock at a future date. Even though conversion into shares of common stock will occur upon the mere passage of time, the outstanding shares of common stock included in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS should be determined on the basis of the current form of the instrument. Therefore, shares of common stock underlying a mandatorily convertible preferred stock or debt instrument should not be included in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS; however, the two-class method of calculating basic EPS is required if the mandatorily convertible instrument meets the definition of a participating security. Similarly, shares of a second class of common stock underlying a mandatorily convertible common stock instrument should not be included in the outstanding shares of the second class of common stock. However, the mandatorily convertible common stock instrument is considered outstanding common stock. In this circumstance, the two-class method of calculating EPS is required. See Chapter 5 for discussion of participating securities and the two-class method of calculating EPS.
Connecting the Dots
The treatment of mandatorily convertible instruments in the calculation of basic EPS is consistent with the accounting guidance that the FASB proposed in its August 7, 2008, exposure draft as part of a convergence project with the IASB. While that proposed guidance was never issued in final form, we understand that the SEC staff has previously concluded that an entity should not consider common stock as outstanding shares in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS when those shares will be issued in the future upon a mandatory conversion or an exchange of another outstanding instrument. We understand that this view is based on the fact that the shares of common stock are not legally outstanding before the conversion or exchange, and the guidance on contingently issuable shares does not apply because there are no contingencies or uncertainties related to the ultimate issuance of such shares of common stock.
3.3.2.3 Share-Based Payment Awards
3.3.2.3.1 Nonvested Share Awards
During the requisite service period or nonemployee’s
vesting period, share-based payment awards do not affect the denominator
in the calculation of basic EPS. Once the awards are vested, the shares
of common stock that have been legally issued are considered outstanding
shares and are included in the denominator in the calculation of basic
EPS. That is, while nonvested shares of common stock that vest solely on
the basis of a service condition are not included in the denominator in
the calculation of basic EPS during the requisite service period or
nonemployee’s vesting period even if the shares have been legally
issued, once the goods are delivered or the service period is complete,
the shares become outstanding common stock and are included in the
weighted-average number of common shares outstanding. This is the case
even if the awards contain clawback features (see Section 7.1.1).
Such awards will be included in the weighted-average number of common
shares from the date on which they become vested outstanding common
shares. Although nonvested shares are not considered outstanding with
respect to the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS, all
outstanding nonvested shares that contain nonforfeitable rights to
dividends or dividend equivalents, when dividends are declared on shares
of common stock, are considered participating securities. Because the
nonvested shares are considered participating securities, the issuing
entity is required to apply the two-class method to calculate EPS. See
Section
7.1.3.1 for further discussion of when share-based
payment awards represent a participating security.
3.3.2.3.2 Stock Options
Share-based payment awards in the form of stock options
are not included in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS,
whether the awards are vested or unvested. The same is true of
liability-classified share-based payment awards. However, stock option
awards and liability-classified awards could also meet the definition of
a participating security to which an entity is required to apply the
two-class method of calculating basic EPS.
3.3.2.3.3 Retirement-Eligible Employees
Awards of shares to employees that vest when the grantee becomes eligible
for retirement must be considered outstanding shares in the denominator
of basic EPS as of the date the grantee is eligible to retire and retain
the shares. This is because, once the employee is eligible to retire,
there are no conditions that must be met for the common stock to be
issued. Such shares are not considered contingently issuable shares
since an agreement that requires an entity to issue common shares only
after the mere passage of time is not considered a contingently issuable
share arrangement. In other words, no remaining service period is
associated with the issuance of the shares since the holder can retire
at any time and receive the shares.
3.3.2.4 Other Compensatory Arrangements
Section 7.2 discusses when common stock held by an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) should be outstanding in the calculation of basic EPS. Section 7.3 discusses the impact that other compensatory arrangements, including profits interests and common stock owned by a rabbi trust, have on the calculation of basic EPS.
3.3.2.5 Contingently Issuable Shares
ASC 260-10
Treatment of
Contingently Issuable Shares in Weighted-Average
Shares Outstanding
45-12C Contractual agreements
(usually associated with purchase business
combinations) sometimes provide for the issuance of
additional common shares contingent upon certain
conditions being met. Consistent with the objective
that basic EPS should represent a measure of the
performance of an entity over a specific reporting
period, contingently issuable shares should be
included in basic EPS only when there is no
circumstance under which those shares would not be
issued and basic EPS should not be restated for
changed circumstances.
45-13 Shares issuable for
little or no cash consideration upon the
satisfaction of certain conditions (contingently
issuable shares) shall be considered outstanding
common shares and included in the computation of
basic EPS as of the date that all necessary
conditions have been satisfied (in essence, when
issuance of the shares is no longer contingent).
Outstanding common shares that are contingently
returnable (that is, subject to recall) shall be
treated in the same manner as contingently issuable
shares. Thus, contingently issuable shares include
shares that meet any of the following criteria:
-
They will be issued in the future upon the satisfaction of specified conditions.
-
They have been placed in escrow and all or part must be returned if specified conditions are not met.
-
They have been issued but the holder must return all or part if specified conditions are not met.
Contingently issuable shares include:
-
Shares that will be issued in the future on the basis of the satisfaction of specified conditions (e.g., common shares issuable to a customer if certain levels of purchases are reached or common shares issuable to the seller of a business if the issuer’s common stock price does not increase by a specified date).
-
Shares that have been issued but that must be returned to the issuer if certain specified conditions occur or fail to occur.
The ASC 260 EPS guidance on contingently
issuable shares does not apply to the following:
-
Shares issuable solely upon the passage of time. (While contingent issuances of shares are usually based on the passage of time and another specified condition, shares issuable upon the mere passage of time are not contingently issuable because the passage of time is certain to occur.)
-
Share-based payment arrangements that are subject to ASC 718, including shares that vest on the basis of only a service condition and shares that have vested but that are subject to clawback provisions. (The relevant guidance on share-based payments applies to these arrangements.)
In accordance with ASC 260-10-45-12C and 45-13, when an entity is
contingently obligated to issue shares of common stock (i.e., the issuance
of common shares will occur only upon resolution of a substantive
contingency), those shares of common stock are not included in the
outstanding shares of common stock in the denominator in the calculation of
basic EPS. In other words, contractual arrangements that meet the definition
of contingently issuable shares are not outstanding shares of common stock
because ASC 260-10-45-12C specifies that “contingently issuable shares
should be included in basic EPS only when there is no circumstance under
which those shares would not be issued.” Thus, the outstanding common stock
of an entity includes such shares only when they are no longer contingently
issuable. Shares of common stock that are legally issued and outstanding but
contingently returnable are treated in the same manner as contingently
issuable shares. When the contingencies associated with contingently
issuable or contingently returnable shares are resolved, the shares of
common stock should be included in the calculation of weighted-average
common shares. Such shares are included in outstanding shares in the
calculation of basic EPS beginning on the date the last contingency was
resolved.
See Section 3.3.2.3.3 for discussion of
common stock held by retirement-eligible employees. See Section 7.1.1 for
discussion of the treatment of clawback features associated with vested
share-based payment awards.
The examples below illustrate application of the ASC 260
guidance on contingently issuable shares.
Example 3-29
Calculating
Basic EPS When Issuance of Shares Is Contingent on
Attainment of Future Earnings
Company X, which reports on a
calendar-year basis, purchased Subsidiary Y on
January 1 for $100 million plus 20,000 shares of X’s
common stock for each year within the next five
years in which Y has net income of $10 million or
more. By June 30 of year 1, Y has net income of $15
million.
While the 20,000 shares of X’s
common stock would be issuable if the end of the
contingency period were June 30 instead of December
31, the 20,000 common shares should be excluded from
basic EPS for the six months ended June 30, because
events could occur in the next six months that would
cause X not to issue the shares (i.e., Y could lose
$6 million in the next six months).
If Y’s net income for the year ended
December 31 was $12 million, the shares would be
included in the denominator for basic EPS for only
that portion of the year for which the contingency
was resolved (i.e., nothing could happen that would
cause X not to issue the shares). See Example
4-17 for an illustration of the
calculation of diluted EPS.
Because there are five separate
measurement periods for the contingency, each
measurement period in which a finite number of
common shares may be issued should be treated as a
separate contingency and evaluated on the basis of
whether X may be required to issue the common shares
for each period on a stand-alone basis for basic
EPS. If the purchase agreement required X to issue
100,000 shares of its common stock if Y achieved $50
million in cumulative net income at the end of five
years, no shares would be included in basic EPS
until the end of the contingency period and then
only if Y had cumulative earnings in excess of $50
million.
In the calculation of basic EPS,
shares that are contingently returnable should not
be considered outstanding for basic EPS until the
conditions under which return of the shares is
required have been satisfied. Thus, if the shares
discussed above had been legally issued and placed
into escrow, the accounting conclusion above would
not be affected.
Example 3-30
Calculating
Basic EPS When Issuance of Shares Is Contingent on
Continued Employment
Company M has a mandatory deferred
compensation plan under which covered employees are
required to defer the amount of compensation payable
in one calendar year in excess of $1 million until
completion of the deferral period. The deferral
period ends when the employee ceases to earn $1
million annually or reaches the defined retirement
age as an employee of M. If the employee is
terminated or resigns, he or she is not eligible to
receive any distribution under the plan. The
compensation deferred under the plan is only payable
to the participant in shares of M’s common stock
over a five-year period once the participant is
eligible to receive the distribution.
A participant’s deferred
compensation is held in an escrow account until the
individual is eligible to receive distributions. The
escrow account does not bear interest; however, it
receives the dividend equivalent on the basis of the
equivalent number of common stock into which the
cash value of the account would be converted,
depending on the closing price of the common stock
on the NYSE for the trading day preceding the
original deferral. Distributions from the account
are based on the equivalent number of common shares
that the cash value of the distribution would
convert into, depending on the closing price of the
stock on the NYSE for the trading day preceding the
distribution.
The common stock issuable under the
plan is considered contingently issuable shares
because the common stock will not be issued if the
employee is terminated or resigns from M’s
employment before retirement. The shares issuable
under the plan should be excluded from the
calculation of basic EPS because it is possible that
the employee will never receive the shares.
Further, the number of shares
contingently issuable may depend on the market price
of the stock at a future date. If the market price
may change in a future period, such contingently
issuable shares should not be included in basic EPS
because all necessary conditions have not been
satisfied. See Example 4-24 for
the effect of contingently issuable securities on
diluted EPS.
In addition, outstanding common
shares that are contingently returnable (i.e.,
subject to recall) should be treated in the same
manner as contingently issuable shares. If shares
are returnable or placed in escrow until they are
vested or some other contingent criteria are met,
the shares should be excluded from the denominator
in the computation of basic EPS even if they have
been issued.
3.3.2.5.1 Shares Issuable for Little or No Consideration
Shares issuable for little or no consideration that do
not contain any conditions that must be satisfied for the holder to
ultimately receive (or retain) the shares are not considered
contingently issuable. ASC 260-10-45-13 states, in part, that “shares
issuable for little or no cash consideration [that are not contingently
issuable shares] shall be considered outstanding common shares and
included in the computation of basic EPS.” In this section, it is
assumed that shares issuable for little or no consideration do not
contain any vesting conditions.
In determining the appropriate accounting for shares
issuable for little or no consideration, an entity must first assess
whether the issuance constitutes a nominal issuance of common stock. If
so, the shares of common stock are considered outstanding
retrospectively for all prior reporting periods presented. Section 8.3.4
discusses nominal issuances of common stock.
If the issuance is not considered nominal, the entity must determine
whether the consideration that must be paid for the holder to receive
the shares is “little or none.” Accordingly, the entity is required to
compare the consideration that must be paid by the holder with the fair
value of the shares of common stock to be received. This comparison is
only performed at the inception of the instrument on the basis of the
fair value of the common stock to be received on that date. Reassessment
is only necessary if the instrument is modified.
An entity must use judgment to determine the meaning of “little or none”
in this context. We believe that “little or none” generally means
“nonsubstantive.” If the consideration that must be paid for the holder
to receive the shares is determined to be “little or none,” the related
shares are considered outstanding with respect to the denominator in the
calculation of basic EPS.
Connecting the Dots
It is not appropriate to exclude from the denominator in the
calculation of basic EPS common shares that are issuable for
little or no consideration on the basis of any of the following:
- Beneficial ownership limitations that apply to the holder.
- The holder paid the entity a substantive amount to acquire the instrument.
- Conditions outside the share issuance agreement that could affect the holder’s ability or intent to ultimately acquire the underlying common shares.
Some entities issue options or warrants with an exercise price of $0.01
or less. Such instruments are often referred to as “penny warrants.”
Unless the issuer’s stock price is also nominal, the shares issuable
under equity-classified penny warrants must be included in the
denominator in the calculation of basic EPS. Diversity in practice may
exist with respect to whether the shares issuable under
liability-classified penny warrants that are measured at fair value
through earnings are reflected in the denominator in the calculation of
basic EPS. However, if such shares are not included in the denominator,
such instruments will typically be considered participating securities
because the holder would be economically compelled to exercise the
warrants if the entity declares a dividend. See Chapter 5 for more information about the
two-class method of calculating EPS.
The example below
illustrates the accounting for penny warrants.
Example 3-31
Penny
Warrants
Company G issues $100 million of
convertible debt with equity-classified detachable
warrants. The warrants enable the investors in the
convertible debt to acquire 10 million shares of
G’s common stock at an exercise price per share of
$0.01. On the date of issuance, the quoted market
price of G’s common stock is $25 per share. The
warrants are not considered to reflect a nominal
issuance of common stock.
The warrants are not
contingently issuable shares because no conditions
must be met before the underlying common stock is
issued. (This would be true even if the holder’s
ability to exercise the warrants is subject to a
beneficial ownership limitation, because the
holder would be able to sell shares to fully
exercise the warrants.) The exercise of the
warrants is virtually certain because the exercise
price is clearly nonsubstantive in relation to the
fair value of the common shares to be issued upon
exercise. Because G’s common stock will be issued
for little or no consideration, the shares
underlying the warrants should be considered
outstanding in the denominator in the calculation
of basic EPS from the issuance date of the
warrant. This conclusion would apply regardless of
whether the warrants are immediately exercisable
or will become exercisable on a future date on the
basis of the mere passage of time.
If the investors’ ability to
exercise the warrants depends on the satisfaction
of certain conditions, all of the necessary
conditions for issuance of the underlying common
shares would not be met as of the date the
warrants are issued and the shares underlying the
warrants should not be included in the denominator
in the calculation of basic EPS. In such
circumstances, the warrants represent contingently
issuable shares.
3.3.2.6 Common Stock Subscriptions
Stock subscriptions allow entities to offer employees and other investors the ability to purchase shares of the entity’s common stock typically over a period of time and without a broker’s commission. The impact of a stock subscription agreement on basic EPS depends on whether (1) the investor is entitled to participate in dividends before the subscription agreement is fully paid and (2) the shares of common stock are legally issued and outstanding. Generally, the shares of common stock underlying a fully unpaid stock subscription agreement have no impact on the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS; however, the two-class method may need to be applied if the arrangement represents a participating security. For partially paid stock subscription agreements, the common-share equivalent of the paid portion should generally be treated as outstanding shares of common stock if the investor is entitled to participate in dividends on that portion. See further discussion in Section 8.3.1.
3.3.2.7 Common Stock Issued for Note Receivable
The facts and circumstances associated with legally outstanding common stock that was issued in return for a note receivable will vary depending on the contractual terms of the arrangement. ASC 260 does not provide specific guidance on situations in which an entity has issued shares of common stock to
an investor that are legally outstanding and not subject to any vesting conditions in return for a note receivable. The determination of whether common shares issued in return for a note receivable should be considered outstanding and included in the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS, or should be treated as contingently issuable shares, depends on whether the entity has the ability and intent to cancel the shares if the note receivable is not repaid. See further discussion in Section 8.3.2.
3.3.2.8 An Entity’s Own Share Lending
An entity may loan its shares of common stock to an investment bank or third-party investor in conjunction with the issuance of convertible debt. Such shares are “loaned” because the investment bank or investor is unable to borrow shares in the market to hedge its exposure to the conversion option in the issuer’s convertible debt or because the borrowing cost is prohibitive. As noted in ASC 470-20-05-12B, although the “loaned” shares are legally issued and outstanding, those shares are generally not considered outstanding shares of common stock in the calculation of basic EPS. See further discussion in Section 8.5.
3.3.3 Repurchases of Common Stock
3.3.3.1 Shares of Common Stock That Have Been Repurchased
ASC 260-10-45-10 indicates that “[s]hares issued during the period and shares reacquired during the period shall be weighted for the portion of the period that they were outstanding.” Therefore, the weighted-average common shares outstanding should reflect the reduction of outstanding shares of common stock from the reacquisition date, whether the reacquired shares are canceled or held in treasury. Such repurchases include the shares of common stock acquired in the treasury stock component of an accelerated share repurchase program. See Section 8.4.1 for additional discussion of accelerated share repurchase programs.
3.3.3.2 Forwards to Repurchase Common Stock
ASC 480-10
EPS
45-4 Entities that have
issued mandatorily redeemable shares of common stock
or entered into forward contracts that require
physical settlement by repurchase of a fixed number
of the issuer’s equity shares of common stock in
exchange for cash shall exclude the common shares
that are to be redeemed or repurchased in
calculating basic and diluted earnings per share
(EPS). Any amounts, including contractual
(accumulated) dividends and participation rights in
undistributed earnings, attributable to shares that
are to be redeemed or repurchased that have not been
recognized as interest costs in accordance with
paragraph 480-10-35-3 shall be deducted in computing
income available to common shareholders (the
numerator of the EPS calculation), consistently with
the two-class method set forth in paragraphs
260-10-45-60 through 45-70.
The weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding should exclude shares of common stock that will be repurchased under a forward contract that requires an entity to repurchase a fixed number of its shares of common stock. Such shares of common stock should be removed from the shares of common stock outstanding beginning on the date the forward contract is entered into.
Questions often arise about whether it is appropriate to
reduce the denominator in the calculation of basic EPS when an entity has a
forward contract to repurchase a variable number of shares that must be
physically settled. Although the EPS guidance in ASC 480-10-45-4 refers to
contracts in which a fixed number of shares must be physically settled, it
is generally appropriate to reduce the denominator by the minimum number of
shares of common stock that will be repurchased, but only if the contract
specifies a contractual minimum. In these circumstances, the entity should
apply a method akin to the two-class method for the number of shares removed
from the denominator if those shares are entitled to dividends during the
period of the forward contract and the holder is not obligated to return
those dividends to the entity. See Section 3.2.4.3.1 for further
discussion of the adjustments to the numerator for the shares of common
stock removed from the denominator.
3.3.4 Shareholder Distributions
In certain situations, the outstanding number of shares of common stock must be adjusted retrospectively for all prior periods presented. These situations include:
- Stock dividends and stock splits (including reverse stock splits) — see Section 8.2.1.
- Rights issues — see Section 8.2.2.
- Nominal issuances of common stock — see Section 8.3.4.
Other distributions to shareholders are considered the issuance of common stock and do not need to be treated retrospectively. Rather, in such cases, the shares of common stock are considered outstanding and included in the denominator of the calculation of basic EPS only from the issuance date. See further discussion in Section 8.3.3.
3.3.5 Business Combinations and Reorganizations
ASC 260 does not permit the retrospective adjustment of EPS for shares of common stock issued in a business combination. Rather, such shares issued as part of the purchase price affect the weighted-average common shares outstanding in the calculation of basic EPS only from the issuance date. However, in reverse merger transactions and certain reorganizations that are considered akin to split-like situations, the number of shares of common stock is retrospectively adjusted to the earliest period presented to reflect the recapitalization. See discussion of these types of situations, as well as the impact of spin-off transactions, in Section 8.6.