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Chapter 17 Payout Policy. Chapter Outline. 17.1 Distributions to Shareholders 17.2 Comparison of Dividends and Share Repurchases 17.3 The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends 17.4 Dividend Capture and Tax Clienteles 17.5 Payout Versus Retention of Cash. Chapter Outline.
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Chapter 17 Payout Policy
Chapter Outline 17.1 Distributions to Shareholders 17.2 Comparison of Dividends and Share Repurchases 17.3 The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends 17.4 Dividend Capture and Tax Clienteles 17.5 Payout Versus Retention of Cash
Chapter Outline 17.6 Signaling with Payout Policy 17.7 Stock Dividends, Splits and Spin-offs
17.1 Distribution to Shareholders • Payout Policy • The way a firm chooses between the alternative ways to distribute free cash flow to equity holders
Dividends • Declaration Date • The date on which the board of directors authorizes the payment of a dividend • Record Date • When a firm pays a dividend, only shareholders on record on this date receive the dividend.
Dividends (cont'd) • Ex-dividend Date • A date, two days prior to a dividend’s record date, on or after which anyone buying the stock will not be eligible for the dividend • Payable Date (Distribution Date) • A date, generally within a month after the record date, on which a firm mails dividend checks to its registered stockholders
Figure 17.2 Important Dates for Microsoft’s Special Dividend
Dividends (cont'd) • Special Dividend • A one-time dividend payment a firm makes, which is usually much larger than a regular dividend • Stock Split (Stock Dividend) • When a company issues a dividend in shares of stock rather than cash to its shareholders
Dividends (cont'd) • Return of Capital • When a firm, instead of paying dividends out of current earnings (or accumulated retained earnings), pays dividends from other sources, such as paid-in-capital or the liquidation of assets • Liquidating Dividend • A return of capital to shareholders from a business operation that is being terminated
Share Repurchases • An alternative way to pay cash to investors is through a share repurchase or buyback. • The firm uses cash to buy shares of its own outstanding stock. • In this kind of transaction, the firm uses cash to buy shares of its own outstanding stock. • These shares are generally held in the corporate treasury, and they can be resold if the company needs to raise money in the future.
Share Repurchases (cont'd) • Open Market Repurchase • A firm announces its intention to buy its own shares in the open market, and then proceeds to do so over time like any other investor. • Open market share repurchases represent about 95% of all repurchase transactions. The firm may take a year or more to buy the shares, and it is not obligated to repurchase the full amount it originally stated. Also, the firm must not buy its shares in a way that might appear to manipulate the price. For example, SEC guidelines recommend that the firm not purchase more than 25% of the average daily trading volume in its shares on a single day, nor make purchases at the market open or within 30 minutes of the close of trade
Share Repurchases (cont'd) • Tender Offer • A public announcement of an offer to all existing security holders to buy back a specified amount of outstanding securities at a prespecified price (typically set at a 10%-20% premium to the current market price) over a prespecified period of time (usually about 20 days) • The offer often depends on shareholders tendering a sufficient number of shares. • If shareholders do not tender enough shares, the firm may cancel the offer and no buyback occurs.
Share Repurchases (cont'd) • Dutch Auction • A share repurchase method in which the firm lists different prices at which it is prepared to buy shares, and shareholders in turn indicate how many shares they are willing to sell at each price. • The firm then pays the lowest price at which it can buy back its desired number of shares
Share Repurchases (cont'd) • Targeted Repurchase • When a firm purchases shares directly from a specific shareholder • In this case the purchase price is negotiated directly with the seller. • A targeted repurchase may occur if a major shareholder desires to sell a large number of shares but the market for the shares is not sufficiently liquid to sustain it • Greenmail • When a firm avoids a threat of takeover and removal of its management by a major shareholder by buying out the shareholder, often at a large premium over the current market price
17.2 Comparison of Dividends and Share Repurchases • Consider Genron Corporation. • The firm’s board is meeting to decide how to pay out $20 million in excess cash to shareholders. • Genron has no debt, its equity cost of capital equals its unlevered cost of capital of 12%.
Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash • With 10 million shares outstanding, Genron will be able to pay a $2 dividend immediately. • The firm expects to generate future free cash flows of $48 million per year, thus it anticipates paying a dividend of $4.80 per share each year thereafter.
Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash (cont'd) • Cum-dividend • Just before the ex-dividend date, the stock is said to trade cum-dividend (“with the dividend”) • Thus, entitling anyone who buys the stock to the dividend • The cum-dividend price of Genron will be
Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash (cont'd) • After the ex-dividend date, new buyers will not receive the current dividend and the share price and the price of Genron will be
Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash (cont'd) The amount of the price drop is equal to the amount of the current dividend, $2. We can also determine this change in the share price using a simple market value balance sheet (values in millions of dollars):
Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash (cont'd) • In a perfect capital market, when a dividend is paid, the share price drops by the amount of the dividend when the stock begins to trade ex-dividend.
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) • Suppose that instead of paying a dividend this year, Genron uses the $20 million to repurchase its shares on the open market. • With an initial share price of $42, Genron will repurchase 476,000 shares. • $20 million ÷ $42 per share = 0.476 million shares • This will leave only 9.524 million shares outstanding. • 10 million − 0.476 million = 9.524 million
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) (cont'd) • The net effect is that the share price remains unchanged.
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) (cont'd) • Genron’s Future Dividends • It should not be surprising that the repurchase had not effect on the stock price. • After the repurchase, the future dividend would rise to $5.04 per share. • $48 million ÷ 9.524 million shares = $5.04 per share • Genron’s share price is
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) (cont'd) • Genron’s Future Dividends • In perfect capital markets, an open market share repurchase has no effect on the stock price, and the stock price is the same as the cum-dividend price if a dividend were paid instead.
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) (cont'd) • Investor Preferences • In perfect capital markets, investors are indifferent between the firm distributing funds via dividends or share repurchases. • By reinvesting dividends or selling shares, they can replicate either payout method on their own.
Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) (cont'd) • Investor Preferences • In the case of Genron, if the firm repurchases shares and the investor wants cash, the investor can raise cash by selling shares. • This is called a homemade dividend. • If the firm pays a dividend and the investor would prefer stock, they can use the dividend to purchase additional shares.
Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue) • Suppose Genron wants to pay dividend larger than $2 per share right now, but it only has $20 million in cash today. • Thus, Genron needs an additional $28 million to pay the larger dividend now. • To do this, the firm decides to raise the cash by selling new shares.
Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue) (cont'd) • Given a current share price of $42, Genron could raise $28 million by selling 0.67 million shares. • $28 million ÷ $42 per share = 0.67 million shares • This will increase the total number of shares to 10.67 million.
Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue) (cont'd) • The new dividend per share will be • And the cum-dividend share price will be • Again, the share value is unchanged.
Modigliani–Miller and Dividend Policy Irrelevance • There is a trade-off between current and future dividends. • If Genron pays a higher current dividend, future dividends will be lower. • If Genron pays a lower current dividend, future dividends will be higher.
Table 17.1 Genron’s Dividends per Share Each Year Under the Three Alternative Policies
Modigliani–Miller and Dividend Policy Irrelevance (cont'd) • MM Dividend Irrelevance • In perfect capital markets, holding fixed the investment policy of a firm, the firm’s choice of dividend policy is irrelevant and does not affect the initial share price.
Dividend Policy with Perfect Capital Markets • A firm’s free cash flow determines the level of payouts that it can make to its investors. • In a perfect capital market, the type of payout is irrelevant. • In reality, capital markets are not perfect and it is these imperfections that should determine the firm’s payout policy.
17.3 The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends • Taxes on Dividends and Capital Gains • Shareholders must pay taxes on the dividends they receive and they must also pay capital gains taxes when they sell their shares. • Dividends are typically taxed at a higher rate than capital gains. • In fact, long-term investors can defer the capital gains tax forever by not selling.
Table 17.2 Long-Term Capital Gains Versus Dividend Tax Rates in the United States, 1971–2012
17.3 The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends (cont'd) • Taxes on Dividends and Capital Gains • The higher tax rate on dividends makes it undesirable for a firm to raise funds to pay a dividend. • When dividends are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains, if a firm raises money by issuing shares and then gives that money back to shareholders as a dividend, shareholders are hurt because they will receive less than their initial investment.
Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes • When the tax rate on dividends is greater than the tax rate on capital gains, shareholders will pay lower taxes if a firm uses share repurchases rather than dividends. • This tax savings will increase the value of a firm that uses share repurchases rather than dividends.
Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes (cont'd) • The optimal dividend policy when the dividend tax rate exceeds the capital gain tax rate is to pay no dividends at all. • The payment of dividends has declined on average over the last 30 years while the use of repurchases has increased.
Figure 17.4 Trends in the Use of Dividends and Repurchases Source: Compustat.
Figure 17.5 The Changing Composition of Shareholder Payouts Source: Compustat data for U.S. firms, excluding financial firms and utilities.
Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes (cont'd) • Dividend Puzzle • When firms continue to issue dividends despite their tax disadvantage
17.4 Dividend Capture and Tax Clienteles • The preference for share repurchases rather than dividends depends on the difference between the dividend tax rate and the capital gains tax rate. • Tax rates vary by income, by jurisdiction, and by whether the stock is held in a retirement account. • Given these differences, firms may attract different groups of investors depending on their dividend policy.
The Effective Dividend Tax Rate • Consider buying a stock just before it goes ex-dividend and selling the stock just after. • The equilibrium condition must be: • Which can be stated as • WherePcum is the cum-dividend price, Pex is the ex-dividend price, g is the capital gains rate tax, d is the dividend tax rate.
The Effective Dividend Tax Rate (cont'd) • Thus, the effective dividend tax rate is • This measures the additional tax paid by the investor per dollar of after-tax capital gains income that is instead received as a dividend.