Business Definition for: par value
par value
amount arbitrarily assigned by the corporate charter to one share of stock and printed on the stock certificate. The par value represents the legal capital per share. There can be no dividend declared that would cause the stockholders' equity to go below the par value of the outstanding shares. Par value may be a minimum cushion of equity capital existing for creditor protection. The par value is the amount per share entered in the capital stock account. It is usually significantly lower than the market price per share.
par value
par value
- Banking. A check collection system where depository institutions exchange checks at face value, without charging a fee (called an exchange charge) for accepting checks drawn on other banks. Non-par banking was prevalent during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Banks that are member banks in the Federal Reserve System are required by the Fed to honor checks at face value, and in fact, most banks, even nonmember state banks, honor checks at par exchange. The Federal Reserve maintains a list, called the par list, of banks that pay checks at par.
- Securities. The face value of a security or financial instrument. The par value of a common stock is the nominal value assigned by a corporate charter, and has no specific financial relevance after the issue date. The par value of a debt security, for example a bond, is very relevant, as that is the price that will be paid the bondholder at maturity. The bond coupon interest payable semi-annually is a percentage of a bond's par value. Preferred stock dividends normally are stated as a percentage of the assigned par value, but also may be determined by auction bidding at periodic intervals. Par value is unrelated to market value, which is influenced more by market pricing,
yield
on the securities offered for sale,
Net Asset Value
, and prices of comparable issues in the secondary market. See also
accretion of discount
.
par value
stated or
face value
of a stock or bond. It has little significance for common stock. The par value on bonds specifies the payment at maturity.
Related Terms:
equal to the nominal or face value of a security. A bond selling at par, for instance, is worth the same dollar amount it was issued for or at which it will be redeemed at maturity-typically, $1,000 per bond.
With common stock, par value is set by the company issuing the stock. At one time, par value represented the original investment behind each share of stock in goods, cash, and services, but today this is rarely the case. Instead, it is an assigned amount (such as $1 a share) used to compute the dollar accounting value of the common shares on a company's balance sheet. Par value has no relation to market value, which is determined by such considerations as Net Asset Value , yield, and investors' expectations of future earnings. Some companies issue no-par-value stock. See also stated value.
Par value has more importance for bonds and preferred stock. The interest paid on bonds is based on a percentage of a bond's par value-a 10% bond pays 10% of the bond's par value annually. Preferred dividends are normally stated as a percentage of the par value of the preferred stock issue.
Referring Terms:
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