1 / 30

Understanding Cooperative Equity

Understanding Cooperative Equity. Phil Kenkel Bill Fitzwater Cooperative Chair Oklahoma State University. Investor Owned. Cooperative. Legal business Forms . Individual Partnership Limited Liability Company Corporation. What is a Cooperative?.

artie
Télécharger la présentation

Understanding Cooperative Equity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Cooperative Equity Phil Kenkel Bill Fitzwater Cooperative Chair Oklahoma State University

  2. Investor Owned Cooperative Legal business Forms • Individual • Partnership • Limited Liability Company • Corporation

  3. What is a Cooperative? A Cooperative is an association of members (corporation) owned and controlled by the people who use its services. $ $ Investor $ Member Customer Investor Customer Corporation- Cooperative Corporation $ $

  4. A COOPERATIVE • A business that is owned and democratically controlled by the people who use its services and whose benefits are derived and distributed equitable on the basis of use. • The more they use the cooperative the more service they receive • Earnings are allocated based on the amount of business done with the co-op.

  5. COOPERATIVES are... Private Businesses owned and controlled by users and operated principally to provide benefits to users.

  6. One-third of Americans are directly served by co-ops NCB

  7. What is Different About a Cooperative • Profits are distributed in proportion to use (business volume) • Limited or no return on equity • Equity is temporary (revolves) • Voting is not in proportion to equity investment • Limitation on non-member business • Cooperation between cooperatives

  8. What is Equity • Owner’s investment in the business • Cushion fund that declines if the business suffers a loss • High debt to equity ratios increase the risk of the business and make the banker nervous

  9. Equity in an Investor Owned Firm • In investor-owned firms the profits are distributed in proportion to the equity investment • Investors purchase equity with the anticipation of future returns • Investors may buy or sell their equity to other investors

  10. Why is Cooperative Equity Different • Profits are distributed in proportion to business volume so there is may be no advantage in holding more equity • Many cooperatives require a very low equity investment to join • Cooperatives create equity investment out of the profit stream by retaining cash and issuing the patron stock • There is generally no market for cooperative stock • Each cooperative creates a system to redeem stock at face value

  11. Income Co-op income statement Expenses Net Savings (Non-Member) (Members) Taxes Cash Patronage Refunds Retained Patronage Refunds (Qualified or non-qualified stock) Retain Earnings (Unallocated Equity)

  12. One-Time Stock Sales Per-Unit Retains Retained Patronage Dividends Co-op equity Inflows Outflows Base Capital Plan Special Plans Revolving Funds

  13. How Do Cooperatives Distribute Profits • Unallocated Equity (Retained Earnings) • Cash Patronage • Stock (Retained Patronage)

  14. Retained Patronage • Share of profits distributed as stock • Creates funds for the cooperative to finance infrastructure • Usually taxable to the member when the stock is issued

  15. How Does the Cooperative Distributions Impact My Taxable Income • IRS treats cooperative like an extension of the farm business • Member is taxed on the cash patronage they receive • Most cooperative issue “qualified stock” which is also taxable • Cooperatives issuing qualified stock must pay 20% in cash • Qualified stock is not taxable income when redeemed for cash because the member has already pre-paid the taxes.

  16. Unallocated Equity • Also called retained earnings • Permanent capital because it does not revolves • Created from profits from non-member business and by channeling a portion of the profits to this reserve fund

  17. Purpose of Unallocated Equity • Lenders like non-revolving capital because the cooperative’s debt/equity ratio increases every time stock is redeemed • Because the cooperative stock is redeemed at face value the auditors require the cooperative to either write down stock or reduce unallocated equity every time the cooperative shows a loss • Unallocated equity serves as the cushion fund that prevents frequent stock write downs

  18. Why Equity Redemption? • Equity Redemption is the process of Returning equity in cash to member-patrons who have previously invested. • Over invested or inactive members should not be responsible for financing a cooperative they do not use • Redemption is essential since there is no market for cooperative stock

  19. Equity Redemption Systems • Age of patron • Age of stock • Percentage of all equities • Special Situation (death, hardship, move out of trade territory)

  20. Advantages: Easy to understand and administer Equities somewhat proportional to use for short revolving periods Co-op can set the age level Disadvantages: Equity investment is not very proportional to use Not popular with young members Members may expect fixed revolvingregardless of financial conditions Age of Patron

  21. Advantages: Keeps equity investment more proportional to use Co-op can manage redemption budget by redeeming partial year or multiple years Disadvantages: Requires tracking year of issue Difficult to maintain a fixed period because of the good year-bad year problem Age of Stock

  22. Disadvantages: Redeeming a portion of new members equity when they should be investing more Transfer of ownership cannot be completed without additional provisions. Advantages: Rewards new patrons Easy to understand and administer Works well for cooperatives with a stable membership and patronage Percentage of All Equities

  23. Special Situations • Estate, hardship, moved out of territory • Usually at the discretion of the board unless specified in bylaws or state cooperative law • If the cooperative has limited financial resources the board may redeem estates in a first-in first-out order • Cooperative stock may be allocated in a divorce settlement but the cooperative will not change the timing of redemption

  24. Understanding a Cooperative Stock Write Down

  25. Profits Create Equity Income From Operations Cash Regional Dividends Stock Regional Dividends PROFIT Cash Patronage Dividend Retained Patronage Dividend Balance Sheet Equity

  26. Impact of Profits on theBalance Sheet Debt Cash Physical Assets Allocated Equity Unallocated Equity Stock in Regional Cooperatives

  27. Retained Patronage Dividend Losses Destroy Equity Regional Loss and Stock Write Down Loss From Operations Loss From LOSS Operations Balance Sheet Equity Cash Patronage Dividend Stock Regional Dividend

  28. Impact of Loss on theBalance Sheet Debt Cash Allocated Equity Physical Assets From Unallocated Equity Stock in Regional Cooperatives

  29. Impact of a Stock Write Down on the Member • Face value of stock is reduced • Amount eventually redeemed will be less • Generates an immediate ordinary income taxable loss • Immediate tax benefit cushions the blow of the lower eventual redemption

  30. Understanding Cooperative Equity Summary • Cooperatives distribute earnings in cash and stock • Stock is redeemed at face value under a specific system and the board’s discretion • Stock is usually taxable income when received, not when redeemed • Loss may require a stock write down which generates an ordinary income taxable loss

More Related