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Question
Aman has 500, ₹ 100 shares of a company quoted at ₹ 120, paying a 10% dividend. When the share price rises to ₹ 200 each, he sells all his shares. He invests half of the sale proceeds in ₹ 10, 12% shares at ₹ 25 and the remaining sale proceeds in ₹ 400, 9% shares at ₹ 500.
Find his:
- sales proceeds.
- investment in ₹ 10, 12% shares at ₹ 25.
- original income.
- change in income.
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Solution
Given: Aman holds 500 shares of face value ₹ 100 quoted at ₹ 120, paying a 10% dividend. He sells all when price rises to ₹ 200, then invests half the sale proceeds in ₹ 10, 12% shares at ₹ 25 and the other half in ₹ 400, 9% shares at ₹ 500.
Step-wise calculation:
1. Sale proceeds:
Sale price per share = ₹ 200
Number of shares = 500
Sale proceeds = 500 × 200 = ₹ 100,000
2. Investments from sale proceeds:
Half of proceeds = 100,000 ÷ 2 = ₹ 50,000
Investment in ₹ 10, 12% shares at ₹ 25:
Amount invested = ₹ 50,000
Number of ₹ 10 shares bought
= 50,000 ÷ 25
= 2,000 shares
Investment in ₹ 400, 9% shares at ₹ 500:
Amount invested = ₹ 50,000
Number of ₹ 400 shares bought
= 50,000 ÷ 500
= 100 shares
3. Original annual income (Before sale):
Dividend rate = 10% on face value ₹ 100
⇒ Dividend per share = 0.10 × 100 = ₹ 10
Original income = 500 × 10 = ₹ 5,000 per year
4. New annual income (After reinvestment):
From 2,000 of ₹ 10, 12% shares:
Dividend per such share = 12% of 10 = ₹ 1.20
Income = 2,000 × 1.20 = ₹ 2,400
From 100 of ₹ 400, 9% shares:
Dividend per such share = 9% of 400 = ₹ 36
Income = 100 × 36 = ₹ 3,600
Total new income = 2,400 + 3,600
= ₹ 6,000 per year
5. Change in income:
Change = New income – Original income
= 6,000 – 5,000
= ₹ 1,000 ...(Increase)
Notes
The answer in the textbook is incorrect.
