STOCK DIVIDENDS
7
all these corporations is not available for the two full 7-year periods
prior and subsequent to the date of closing nearest January 1, 1920.
Only 2,846, or considerably over one-half the total number, furnished
this information and this number represents the largest group for
which it is possible to compare both stock capitalization and stock
dividends for approximately the same periods. Such comparisons
are subject to some slight qualification, however, with reference to
those corporations which did not close their books as of December
31. The majority of the reports were on a calendar-year basis and
in consequence the capitalization at the beginning and end of the
two periods and the dividends reported in each period are for exactly
the same seven years. Where a corporation reported for the full
14 years but closed its books on other than a calendar-year basis,
the dividends reported may have referred to either the fiscal or the
calendar year. On the fiscal-year basis the dividends reported in
each period would cover the full seven years between the beginning
and the ending balance sheets in each period but neither would coin-
cide exactly as to time with the capitalization and dividends of the
calendar-year companies, even though the dividends in the former
case are for a full seven years in each period and the beginning and
ending capitalization in each period are exactly seven years apart.
Furthermore, if the books were closed on a fiscal-year basis divi-
dends may have been reported on a calendar-year basis, in which
case the dividends reported cover the same period of time as those
of the calendar-year companies, but the capitalization reported for
the two periods, though covering seven years in cach case, begins and
ends either a little earlier or a little later than those of the calendar
year companies. As each of the periods covered, however, is so long
and the majority of corporations are on a calendar-year basis, the
foregoing discrepancies may be safely disregarded for purposes of
statistical comparisons.
During the first seven years the increase in stock capitalization of
these corporations aggregated only 36.36 per cent, while during the
second seven years the increase was 142.27 per cent. This appears
from the following table of stock capitalization at the beginning
and end of each period:
TasLr 3.—Slock capitalization of 2,846 corporations for the seven-year periods
beginning and ending as of the closing date nearest to January 1, 1920
FITSE7] YOrS. conn ennecrmes numa aman mmm
Becond 7. Years. i ceee rs taanmnrmrinnsnan tram:
14 years... a
Stock capitalization
Beginning
balance sheet
Ending
balance sheet
1, 580,870,985 $2, 155, 754, 346
2,156, 754,846 5, 222, 673, 092
1, 580, 870, 985 | 5, 222, 673, 092
Inerease
Amount
Per cent
$574, 883, 361
3, 066, 918, 746 |
3 641. 802. 107
36. 36
142.27
230.37