L13 Div. Policy

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Dividend Policy

RWJ Chp 18

Different Types of Dividends


Many companies pay a regular cash dividend.
Public companies often pay quarterly. Sometimes firms will throw in an extra cash dividend. The extreme case would be a liquidating dividend.

Often companies will declare share dividends.


No cash leaves the firm. The firm increases the number of shares outstanding.

Some companies declare a dividend in kind.


Wrigleys Gum sends around a box of chewing gum. Dundee Crematoria offers shareholders discounted cremations.

18.2 Standard Method of Cash Dividend Payment


Cash Dividend - Payment of cash by the firm to its shareholders. Ex-Dividend Date - Date that determines whether a shareholder is entitled to a dividend payment; anyone holding share before this date is entitled to a dividend. Record Date - Person who owns share on this date received the dividend.

Procedure for Cash Dividend Payment


25 Oct. 1 Nov. 2 Nov. 6 Nov. 7 Dec.

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.

Price Behavior around the Ex-Dividend Date


In a perfect world, the share price will fall by the amount of the dividend on the ex-dividend date.
-t RM P The price drops Exby the amount of dividend Date the cash dividend Taxes complicate things a bit. Empirically, the price drop is less than the dividend and occurs within the first few minutes of the ex-date. RMP div

-2

-1

+1

+2

The Benchmark Case: An Illustration of the Irrelevance of Dividend Policy


A compelling case can be made that dividend policy is irrelevant. Since investors do not need dividends to convert shares to cash they will not pay higher prices for firms with higher dividend payouts. In other words, dividend policy will have no impact on the value of the firm because investors can create whatever income stream they prefer by using homemade dividends.

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

RM3 Dividend RM240 RM 0 RM240 RM39 80 = RM3,120

Dividend Policy is Irrelevant


Since investors do not need dividends to convert shares to cash, dividend policy will have no impact on the value of the firm. In the above example, Bob Investor began with total wealth of RM3,360: $42
$3,360 = 80 shares share
After a RM3 dividend, his total wealth is still RM3,360:

$39 $3,360 = 80 shares + $240 share


After a RM2 dividend, and sale of 2 ex-dividend shares,his

total wealth is still RM3,360:

$3,360 = 78 shares

$40 + $160 + $80 share

Irrelevance of Share Dividends: Example


Shimano USA has 2 million shares currently outstanding at RM15 per share. The company declares a 50% share dividend. How many shares will be outstanding after the dividend is paid? A 50% share dividend will increase the number of shares by 50%: 2 million1.5 = 3 million shares After the share dividend what is the new price per share and what is the new value of the firm? The value of the firm was RM2m RM15 per share = RM30 m. After the dividend, the value will remain the same. Price per share = RM30m/ 3m shares = RM10 per share

Dividends and Investment Policy


Firms should never forgo positive NPV projects to increase a dividend (or to pay a dividend for the first time). Recall that on of the assumptions underlying the dividend-irrelevance arguments was The investment policy of the firm is set ahead of time and is not altered by changes in dividend policy.

Taxes, Issuance Costs, and Dividends


In a tax-free world, cash dividends are a wash between the firm and its shareholders.

Cash: Share Issue Firm Cash: Dividends Taxes Gov.

Share Holders

In a world with taxes, the government gets a cut.

Taxes, Issuance Costs, and Dividends


In the presence of personal taxes:
1. A firm should not issue share to pay a dividend. 2. Managers have an incentive to seek alternative uses for funds to reduce dividends. 3. Though personal taxes mitigate against the payment of dividends, these taxes are not sufficient to lead firms to eliminate all dividends.

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 versus Dividend


Consider a firm that wishes to distribute RM100,000 to its shareholders. Assets A. Original Cash Other assets Value of Firm Liabilities Balance sheet Debt Equity Value of Firm 0 1,000,000 1,000,000 = RM10 RM150,000 850,000 1,000,000 & Equity

Shares outstanding = 100,000 Price per share = RM1,000,000 /100,000

Share Repurchase versus Dividend


If they distribute the RM100,000 as cash dividend, the balance sheet will look like this: Assets B. After RM1 per share cash dividend Cash Other assets Value of Firm Shares outstanding RM50,000 850,000 900,000 = 100,000 Debt Equity Value of Firm 0 900,000 900,000 Liabilities & Equity

Price per share = RM900,000/1, 000,000 = RM9

Share Repurchase versus Dividend


If they distribute the RM100,000 through a share repurchase, the balance sheet will look like this: Assets C. After share repurchase Cash Other assets Value of Firm Shares outstanding Price per share RM50,000 850,000 900,000 = Liabilities & Equity Debt Equity Value of Firm 0 900,000 900,000 = RM10

= 90,000 RM900,000 / 90,000

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.

Expected Return, Personal Taxes

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.

Real World Factors Favoring a High Dividend Policy


Desire for Current Income Resolution of Uncertainty Tax Arbitrage Agency Costs

Desire for Current Income


The homemade dividend argument relies on no transactions costs. To put this in perspective, mutual funds can repackage securities for individuals at very low cost: they could buy low-dividend shares and with a controlled policy of realizing gains, pay their investors at a specified rate.

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.

Agency Costs of Equity


Managers will find it easier to squander funds if they have a low dividend payout.

A Resolution of Real-World Factors?


Reasons for Low Dividend
Personal Taxes High Issuing Costs

Reasons for High Dividend


Information Asymmetry
Dividends as a signal about firms future performance

Lower Agency Costs


capital market as a monitoring device reduce free cash flow, and hence wasteful spending

Bird-in-the-hand: Theory or Fallacy?


Uncertainty resolution

Desire for Current Income

Clientele Effect

What We Know and Do Not Know About Dividend Policy


Corporations Smooth Dividends. Dividends Provide Information to the Market. Firms should follow a sensible dividend policy:
Dont forgo positive NPV projects just to pay a dividend. Avoid issuing share to pay dividends. Consider share repurchase when there are few better uses for the cash.

Summary and Conclusions


The optimal payout ratio cannot be determined quantitatively. In a perfect capital market, dividend policy is irrelevant due to the homemade dividend concept. A firm should not reject positive NPV projects to pay a dividend. Personal taxes and issue costs are real-world considerations that favor low dividend payouts. Many firms appear to have along-run target dividendpayout policy. There appears to be some value to dividend stability and smoothing. There appears to be some information content in dividend payments.

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