L13 Div. Policy
L13 Div. Policy
L13 Div. Policy
RWJ Chp 18
Declaration Date ExCumdividend dividend Date Date Record Date Payment Date
Declaration Date: The Board of Directors declares a payment of dividends. Cum-Dividend Date: The last day that the buyer of a share is entitled to the dividend. Ex-Dividend Date: The first day that the seller of a share is entitled to the dividend. Record Date: The corporation prepares a list of all individuals believed to be shareholders as of 6 November.
-2
-1
+1
+2
Homemade Dividends
Bianchi Inc. is a RM42 share about to pay a RM2 cash dividend. Bob Investor owns 80 shares and prefers RM3 cash dividend. Bobs homemade dividend strategy: Sell 2 shares ex-dividend
Homemade Dividends Cash from dividend RM160 Cash from selling share RM 80 Total Cash RM240 Value of share Holdings RM40 78 = RM3,120
$3,360 = 78 shares
Share Holders
Repurchase of share
Instead of declaring cash dividends, firms can rid itself of excess cash through buying shares of their own share. Recently share repurchase has become an important way of distributing earnings to shareholders.
Share Repurchase
Lower tax Tender offers If offer price is set wrong, some shareholders lose. Open-market repurchase Targeted repurchase Greenmail Gadflies Repurchase as investment Recent studies has shown that the long-term share price performance of securities after a buyback is significantly better than the share price performance of comparable companies that do not repurchase.
Dividends,
and
What is the relationship between the expected return on the share and its dividend yield? The expected pretax return on a security with a high dividend yield is greater than the expected pretax return on an otherwise-identical security with a low dividend yield. After tax is a different story; otherwise-identical securities should have the same return.
Resolution of Uncertainty
It would be erroneous to conclude that increased dividends can make the firm less risky. A firms overall cash flows are not necessarily affected by dividend policyas long as capital spending and borrowing are not changes. Thus, it is hard to see how the risks of the overall cash flows can be changed with a change in dividend policy.
Tax Arbitrage
Investors can create positions in high dividend-yield securities that avoid tax liabilities. Thus, corporate managers need not view dividends as tax-disadvantaged.
Agency Costs
Agency Cost of Debt
Firms in financial distress are reluctant to cut dividends. To protect themselves, bondholders frequently create loan agreements stating dividends can only be paid if the firm has earns, cash flow and working capital above prespecified levels.
Clientele Effect