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Dividend Policy and Internal Financing. Chapter 17. Dividend Policy and Internal Financing. Dividend Policy. Dividend per Share Earnings per Share. Dividend Payout Ratio =. Dividend Policy and Internal Financing. Dividend Policy. Dividend per Share Earnings per Share.
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Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Chapter 17 .
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share Dividend Payout Ratio =
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • A firm calculates and reports Earnings per Share Dividend Payout Ratio =
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • A firm calculates and reportsearn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio =
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • A firm calculates and reportsearn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid Addition to RE 1 Million Shares Outstanding
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • Stockholders earn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid Addition to RE 1 Million Shares Outstanding EPS = $1.00
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • Stockholders earn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement If have a 50% dividend payout each share of stock will receive a 50¢ dividend Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid Addition to RE 1 Million Shares Outstanding
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • Stockholders earn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement If have a 50% dividend payout each share of stock will receive a 50¢ dividend Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid 500,000 Addition to RE $500,000 $500,000 paid to stockholders and $500,000 is reinvested in the firm 1 Million Shares Outstanding
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • Stockholders earn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement If it has a 0% dividend payout, all earnings are reinvested in the firm Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid Addition to RE 1 Million Shares Outstanding
Dividend Policy and Internal Financing Dividend Policy Dividend per Share Earnings per Share • Stockholders earn Earnings per Share • Management will reinvest part of earnings per share in the company and pay part as dividend Dividend Payout Ratio = Income Statement If have a 0% dividend payout, all earnings are reinvested in the firm Sales $3,000,000 Net Income $1,000,000 Dividends Paid 0 Addition to RE $1,000,000 $0 paid to stockholders and $1,000,000 is reinvested in the firm 1 Million Shares Outstanding
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price • Three Theories of Dividends • Irrelevance • Dividends Increase Stock Price • Dividends Decrease Stock Price
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests 52 Weeks Yld Vol Net Hi Lo Stock Sym Div % PE 100s Hi Lo Close Chg s 42½ 29 MKPS MK 1.75 5.1 24 5067 35 33 34¼ -1 When dividend of $1.75 is paid. the stock price falls by exactly the same amount.
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests 52 Weeks Yld Vol Net Hi Lo Stock Sym Div % PE 100s Hi Lo Close Chg s 42½ 29 MKPS MK 1.75 5.1 24 5067 35 33 34¼ -1 When dividend of $1.75 is paid. the stock price falls by exactly the same amount. $34.25 – $1.75 = $32.50
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests Dividends are Irrelevant Since: • No net gain to investor
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests Dividends are Irrelevant Since: • No net gain to investor • Without receiving dividend, an investor can sell shares of stock costlessly and create their own "dividend"
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 1: Irrelevance Dividend Policy does not affect stock price • Assumes Perfect Markets • No brokerage fees • No floatation costs of issuing shares • No taxes • Equal access to information • Manager's act in shareholders' best interests Dividends are Irrelevant Since: • No net gain to investor • Without receiving dividend, an investor can sell shares of stock costlessly and create their own "dividend" • If the firm pays a large dividend, but needs cash to invest can sell additional shares of stock costlessly.
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 2: High Dividends Increase Stock Value • Theory states: • Dividends are more predicable that capital gains, so investors prefer dividends--"Bird in the Hand theory”
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 2: High Dividends Increase Stock Value • Theory states: • Dividends are more predicable that capital gains, so investors prefer dividends--"Bird in the Hand theory" • To be indifferent, investors will require a higher rate on capital gains than dividends
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 2: High Dividends Increase Stock Value • Theory states: • Dividends are more predicable that capital gains, so investors prefer dividends-- "Bird in the Hand theory” • To be indifferent, investors will require a higher rate on capital gains than dividends • Critics of this theory • Point out cash flows of overall firm are not affected by dividends • If investors want cash, they should leave money in a bank account
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 3: Low Dividends Increase Stock Value • Based on Tax Effects: • Individual investors must pay taxes on dividends as the dividends are received
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 3: Low Dividends Increase Stock Value • Based on Tax Effects: • Individual investors must pay taxes on dividends as the dividends are received • Individual investors can defer taxes on capital gains until they sell the stock Before 1987, Capital Gains were taxed at a lower rate than dividends. Again today, capital gain taxes are lower than current income taxes
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 3: Low Dividends Increase Stock Value • Based on Tax Effects: • Individual investors must pay taxes on dividends as the dividends are received • Individual investors can defer taxes on capital gains until they sell the stock Before 1987, Capital Gains were taxed at a lower rate than dividends • However, corporations may exclude 70% of dividends from corporate income taxes, so they may actually prefer a higher level of dividends
Can Dividend Policy Affect Share Price View 3: Low Dividends Increase Stock Value • Based on Tax Effects: • Individual investors must pay taxes on dividends as the dividends are received • Individual investors can defer taxes on capital gains until they sell the stock Before 1987, Capital Gains were taxed at a lower rate than dividends • However, corporations may exclude 70% of dividends from corporate income taxes, so they may actually prefer a higher level of dividends • Investors prefer the dividend policy that gives the highest after-tax return
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs involved in issuing new stock are very high
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs involved in issuing new stock are very high Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs involved in issuing new stock are very high • Residual Dividend Method • Accept all investments with positive net present values Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs involved in issuing new stock are very high • Residual Dividend Method • Accept all investments with positive net present values • Use retained earnings to finance investments to the extent possible Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs involved in issuing new stock are very high • Residual Dividend Method • Accept all investments with positive net present values • Use retained earnings to finance investments to the extent possible • If earnings left over after making investments, pay a dividend with the residual Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs are involved in issuing new stock are very high • Residual Dividend Method • Accept all investments with positive net present values • Use retained earnings to finance investments when possible • If retained earnings left over after making investments, pay a dividend with the residual • If there are no residual funds, pay no dividend Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock
Residual Dividend Theory Recognizes that floatation costs when issuing new stock are very high • Residual Dividend Method • Accept all investments with positive net present values • Use retained earnings to finance investments when possible • If retained earnings left over after making investments, pay a dividend with the residual • If there are no residual funds, pay no dividend Companies with investment opportunities which require capital would prefer to use internal funds rather than issue new stock Residual Theory minimizes floatation costs
The Clientele Effect Relaxes the assumption of no brokerage fees: in reality, investors must pay brokerage fees every time they buy or sell stock
The Clientele Effect Relaxes the assumption of no brokerage fees: in reality, investors must pay brokerage fees every time they buy or sell stock Recognizes that investors are not all alike
The Clientele Effect Relaxes the assumption of no brokerage fees: in reality, investors must pay brokerage fees every time they buy or sell stock • The Clientele Effect • Some investors need regular cash from stock: to avoid brokerage fees should purchase and hold high dividend paying stocks Recognizes that investors are not all alike
The Clientele Effect Relaxes the assumption of no brokerage fees: in reality, investors must pay brokerage fees every time they buy or sell stock • The Clientele Effect • Some investors need regular cash from stock: to avoid brokerage fees should purchase and hold high dividend paying stocks • Other investors prefer no cash from stocks: to defer taxes and brokerage fees on reinvested cash (dividends), these investors should buy low or no dividend paying stocks Recognizes that investors are not all alike
The Clientele Effect • The Clientele Effect • Some investors need regular cash from stock: to avoid brokerage fees should purchase and hold high dividend paying stocks • Other investors prefer no cash from stocks: to defer taxes and brokerage fees on reinvested cash (dividends), these investors should buy low or no dividend paying stocks • There is no correct dividend policy. Firms should have a stated dividend policy to keep clientele of investors Recognizes that investors are not all alike
Earnings UP 10% 50¢ Dividend Increase The Information Effect Changes in dividends may provide a signal of firm's financial condition Dividend Increase - May signal managers expect higher earnings in the future
Earnings OFF 10% 25¢ Dividend Cut The Information Effect Changes in dividends may provide a signal of firm's financial condition Dividend Decrease - May signal managers expect earnings downturn
Earnings OFF 10% 25¢ Dividend Cut The Information Effect Changes in dividends may provide a signal of firm's financial condition Dividend Decrease - May signal managers expect earnings downturn In practice, stock price usually rises with a unexpected dividend increase and falls with a dividend decrease
Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce a dividend at the level that investors expect, stock price will not be affected
$2.25 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce a dividend at the level that investors expect, stock price will not be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
$2.25 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce a dividend at the level that investors expect, stock price will not be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected
$3.25 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
$3.25 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
$3.25 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share If dividend is lower than expected, investors may believe earnings will be lower than expected and stock price will go down Manager Investor
$1.75 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
$1.75 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share Manager Investor
$1.75 share? Expectations Theory Investors have expectations of managers' actions If managers announce unexpectedly high or low dividend, stock price will be affected $2.25/share If dividend is higher than expected, investors may believe earnings will be higher than expected and stock price will go up Manager Investor