Title: Dividend Policy
1Dividend Policy
Chapter 19 Classes 15 and 17
2Summary
- Cash vs share dividends
- Dividend dates
- Modigliani Miller Irrelevance theorem
- When is dividend policy relevant?
- Dividend policy in practice
- Stock repurchases
- Stock splits
- Stock dividends
3Why Do We Care About Dividends?
- Dividend policy is a decision to give money back
to shareholders and NOT invest in a new project. - Affects the firms capital budgeting decision
- Paying dividends means less internal cash
available for other uses. - Paying dividends means borrowing money to invest
in new projects. - Historically firms pay out dividends in both good
times and bad times.
4Distributions
- Firms make distributions to their shareholders 2
ways - Cash Distributions.
- Cash dividends.
- Stock repurchases.
- Share Distributions.
- Stock dividends.
- Stock splits.
5Cash Dividends Empirical Findings
TSE 300 Composite Index Statistics
6Dividend Differences Across Industry
Average Canadian Dividend Payout Ratios
(1980-1999)Source Standard Poors Computstat
database. September 11,2002
7Dividends and Financing
Relationship between available CF potential uses
Firms should never give up a positive NPV project
to pay dividends!
8Dividend Dates
- Declaration date.
- Ex-dividend date.
- 2 business days prior to the Record date.
- First day the share trades without right to
receive the declared dividend. - Share price will fall by the amount of the
dividend when market opens on the ex-dividend
date. - Record date.
- Payment date.
9Dividends announcements
Stock price
May 31
May 15
Feb 15
May 13
Declaration date
Payment date
Ex-dividend date
Record date
Stock price should fall on the ex-div date, by
the amount of the dividend. This is because
market discounts for the value of dividends.
10Dividend Dates Price Behaviour
11Dividends and Stock Price
12To Re-cap
- Shareholders that owned the shares on the close
of business May 12, receive the dividend May 31. - Shareholders that acquired their shares on May 13
or after, are not entitled to get this dividend. - They would expect to pay less for their shares.
- Shareholders buying on the ex-dividend date or
after will be willing to pay less since they
dont get the dividend.
13MM On Dividends
- In the absence of transactions costs and taxes,
dividend policy is irrelevant and does not affect
shareholder wealth. - Investors can create Home Made Dividends by
selling off a small part of the stock that has
appreciated in value, or undo dividends by
reinvesting the cash dividend. - Show that dividend with offsetting new issue is
irrelevant.
14Irrelevancy Assumptions
- Once again, perfect market assumptions are
necessary - No taxes.
- The firm must hold investment, financing and
operating policies of the firm fixed. Only
dividend policy changes. - Idea firm will issue cash to shareholders as
dividend, and then recoup this amount by issuing
new shares.
15Example 1
- PAN AM Airlines earns EBIT of 10M (ignore taxes)
and has 4M in cash that it wants to pay out as a
dividend. - There are 0.6M shares outstanding.
- The current price is 90 and PAN AM wants to pay
a special dividend of 6.67 per share. PAN AM is
all equity financed and its WACC is 20. - 1.)What is the value of the company before the
dividend? - 2.)What is the value of the company after the
dividend? - 3.)What is the stock price after the dividend?
- 4.)How is shareholder wealth affected by the
dividend?
16Example 1 Solution
- 1.) 90 x 0.6M 54M 10M/.2 4M
- 2.) 54M - 4M 50M
- Note DPS 4M/0.6M 6.67
- 3.) 90 - 6.67 83.33
- 4.) Dividend policy affects the form of
stockholder wealth not the amount thereof.
Consider an investor who owns 1 stock. Before
dividend, wealth 90 in stock. After the
dividend, wealth 83.33 in stock 6.67 in
cash.
17Fundamental Concept
In perfect capital markets, without taxes,
dividend policy is irrelevant
18Taxes and Dividends
In a tax-free world, cash dividends are a wash
between the firm and its shareholders.
Cash stock issue
Firm
Stock Holders
Cash dividends
Taxes
In a world with taxes, the government gets a cut.
Gov.
19Fundamental Concept
Many factors in the real world make dividend
policy relevant
20Real World Relevance - Factors Favoring a Low
Payout.
- Taxes, imposing an immediate tax burden on
investors. - Firm has unusually good investment prospects.
- Cost if have to issue new equity in future.
- Why pay dividends incur costs to issue
securities in the future?
- Bond covenants and other restrictions.
- Growth and control issues.
- Short term cash position.
- Inherent firm risk.
- Restrictions on foreign transfers.
21Real World Relevance Factors Favoring a High
Payout
- Desire of current income
- Costs of home made dividends.
- Uncertainty resolution
- Bird-in-the-hand argument.
- Investors prefer cash dividend now to uncertain
capital gain in future.
- Tax
- Tax exempt owners (pensions, life insurers,
trusts, endowments, etc.) - Signaling arguments.
- Free cash flow issues.
22Practical Implementation of a Dividend Policy
Guiding Principles
- Avoid passing on positive NPV projects to pay
dividends. - Avoid cutting or reducing dividends.
- Avoid the need to sell equity.
- Maintain the target B/S ratio.
- ?These suggest keeping the payout set low in the
first place
23Practical Implementation
- Set a low per share constant dollar dividend.
- Set a target payout consistent with long term
profitability and long term capital needs. - Increase dividends only when the long term
profitability supports the new payout level. - Reduce dividends reluctantly, but do not risk the
viability of the firm.
24Residual Dividend Policy (Four Steps)
- Establish the optimum capital budget
- Accept all projects with positive net present
values - Determine the amount of common equity needed to
finance the new investments while maintaining the
firm's capital structure - Use internally generated funds to supply this
equity whenever possible - Pay cash dividends only to the extent that
internally generated funds remain after taking
all appropriate capital investment opportunities
25Example 2 Residual Dividend Policy
- Farside Corp follows a strict residual dividend
policy. Its debt-equity ratio is 3. - A)If earnings for the year are 150,000, what is
the maximum amount of capital spending possible
without new equity? - B)If planned investment outlays for the coming
year are 750,000, will Farside pay a dividend?
How much? What about if the investment outlay was
500,000? - C)Does Farside maintain a constant dividend
payout?
26Example 2 Solution
- B/S 3 implies 3 of B for every 1 of S also
that B/(BS) .75, S/(BS) .25. - A) If retain 150 as S, must issue B 450.
Thus, max investment 450 150 600 - B) I 750 implies newB 562.5 and newS 187.5.
Retain entire 150 in earnings and issue 37.50 in
new stock - C) I 500 implies newB 375 and newS 125.
Retain 125 in earnings and pay residual 25 as
dividends
27Share Repurchases
- An alternative way to return value to
shareholders - Especially good for firms with clienteles that
prefer capital gains. - Repurchased shares are cancelled (no longer
outstanding). - 3 kinds
- Open market repurchase (normal course issuer
bid). - Buy shares at market price (less than 5).
- Fixed-Price offer (substantial issuer bid).
- Buy target at premium to market price.
- Dutch Auction.
- Target . Shareholders invited to make offers to
sell to firm inside of prescribed range (min and
max).
28A Real Life Example
- March 12/2003
- Brewer Molson Inc. is buying back nearly 3.8
million of its Class A and B shares on the
Toronto Stock Exchange. - The buyback affects about three per cent of the
company's outstanding shares in both classes. - Molson said it wants to buy back and cancel its
stock "to counter the dilutive effect of the
granting of options" to its employees.
29U.S. Repurchases in 1980s
30Repurchase Irrelevance
- Miller Modigliani argue that Dividend Policy is
irrelevant. The same is true for repurchases - Shareholder wealth unaffected by repurchase.
- Investors can create Home Made repurchases by
selling off a small part of the stock that has
appreciated in value, or - Undo repurchases by reinvesting proceeds by
buying more shares. - Once again, perfect market assumptions are
necessary.
31More on Share Repurchases
- Advantages
- Can be a 1 time only action.
- Firm can reduce future total dividend payout.
- Immediate effect on firms capital structure.
- Signaling effect.
- Disadvantages
- Empirically, these firms did not have good growth
opportunities. - Worry about insider price manipulation.
- Tax effect govt normally treats share
repurchase as a dividend.
32Example 3 Stock Repurchase Versus Dividend Issue
- Dungeoness Corp is evaluating an extra dividend
versus a share repurchase. In either case 2500
would be spent. - Shares would be repurchased at current market
prices. Current earnings are 80 per share and
the stock currently sells for 30 per share. - There are 150 shares o/s. Ignore taxes and other
market imperfections. - a) Evaluate the 2 alternatives in terms of the
effect on the price per share of the stock and
shareholder wealth. - b) What will be the effect on Dungeoness eps and
p/e ratio under the 2 different scenarios - c) In the real world, which of these actions
would you recommend? Why?
33Example 3 Share Repurchase Option
- 2,500/3083.33 shares repurchased number of
outstanding shares after repurchase150
83.3366.66 total earnings 0.8x150120 - EPSbefore0.80 EPSafter 120/66.661.80
- Vbefore30x1504,500 Vafter4,500-2,5002,000
- Pbefore30 Pafter2,000/66.6630
- (P/E)before30/.837.5 (P/E)after30/1.8016.66
- EPS rises, P/E drops, P does not change.
34Example 3 Dividend Option
- Vbefore4,500 Vafter2,000
- EPSbeforeEPSafter.80
- Pbefore30 DPS2,500/15016.66 Pafter30-16.66
or 2000/150 13.33 - (P/E)before 30/.837.5 (P/E)after
13.3/.816.6 - EPS does not change P/E drops P drops.
35Example 4 Premium Price Stock Repurchase
(targeted share repurchase or greenmail)
- Baron Realty has 100,000 shares of common stock
o/s with a market price of 50 per share. - The firm normally distributes 60 of its earnings
as cash dividends. - However this year, the firm wishes to use
540,000, i.e., 60 of 900,000 (firms earnings)
to repurchase 10,000 shares at 54 per share from
a dissident shareholder. - Are existing shareholders better or worse off
after the repurchase?
36Example 4 Solution
- The dissident shareholder is being bought out at
a high price of 54 per share rather than the
existing market price of 50 per shares. - The dissident shareholder gains and the other
shareholders lose. - The wealth transfer from the other shareholders
to the dissident is 10,000x4 40,000.
37Stock Dividends and Splits
- Essentially the same thing distributing shares
instead of cash. - 10 stock dividend 1110 split.
- 21 split 100 stock dividend.
- There is an accounting difference.
- Stock Dividend Retained Earnings drops Capital
Stock rises by same amount. - Stock Split no change in either account.
38Stock Dividends and Splits
39Stock Dividends
- Instead of paying a cash dividend paying out a
stock dividend. - Reasons
- Maintaining payout record when cash is low.
- Some clienteles differentiate income principal.
40Example 5 Stock Dividends
- The market value balance sheet for Ace
Manufacturing is shown below. Ace has declared a
15 stock dividend. - The stock goes ex dividend tomorrow (the
chronology for a stock dividend is similar to
that for a cash dividend). - There are 10,000 shares o/s. What will be the ex
dividend price?
41Example 5 Solution
- The number of shares outstanding rises from 10K
to 10K(1.05) 11.5K - Cum dividend P 350K/10K 35
- Ex dividend P 35/1.15 30.43
42Reverse Splits
- When share price gets extremely low firms
sometimes propose a Reverse Split or
Consolidation. - Simply because the share price is now in a more
respectable range, doesnt mean it is a better
investment.
43Example 6
- National Profit Company had the following
shareholders equity section before declaring a
5 stock dividend - Shareholders equity Authorized 500,000 shares
without par value - Issued 200,000 common shares 2 million
- Retained earnings 0.6 million
- 2.6 million
- A) Show the change in shareholders equity
section after the 5 stock dividend given that
the firms shares are currently trading at 15
per share. In accordance with accounting rules,
the firm records the book value of new stock at
15 per share - B) If an investor holds 100 shares of National
Profit Company, what should the total value of
those holdings be before and after the stock
dividend. - C) If the company continues to pay its earlier 2
dividend after the stock dividend, what is the
incremental cash dividend received by an investor
under B)?
44Example 6 Solution
- A) 5x200K 10K is the increase in the number of
outstanding shares. The decrease in the Retained
Earnings account is 10Kx15 or 150K. Thus, the
amount in Retained Earnings from 600K to 450K
while the Common Stock account rises from 2,000K
to 2,150K - B) Market value of 100 shares. Before 100x15
1,500 After 100(1.05) x (15/1.05) 1,500 - C) The investor will own 5 new shares. Thus, the
investor will receive 10 additional dividends.
45Summary and Recap
- Cash versus share dividends.
- Dividend dates.
- MM again!
- When are dividends relevant?
- Dividend policy in practice.
- Stock repurchases, splits (reverse splits) and
dividends.