Title: Financial Management
1? 2002, Prentice Hall, Inc.
2Stock Returns
- P1 - Po D1
- Po
- P1 - Po D1
- Po Po
3Dilemma Should the firm use retained earnings
for
- a) Financing profitable capital investments?
- b) Paying dividends to stockholders?
4- If we retain earnings for profitable investments,
dividend yield will be zero, but the stock price
will increase, resulting in a higher capital
gain.
5- If we pay dividends, stockholders receive an
immediate cash reward for investing, but the
capital gain will decrease, since this cash is
not invested in the firm.
6So, dividend policy really involves 2 decisions
- How much of the firms earnings should be
distributed to shareholders as dividends, and - How much should be retained for capital
investment?
7Is Dividend Policy Important?
- Three viewpoints
- 1) Dividends are Irrelevant. If we assume
perfect markets (no taxes, no transaction costs,
etc.) dividends do not matter. If we pay a
dividend, shareholders dividend yield rises, but
capital gains decrease.
8- With perfect markets, investors are concerned
only with total returns, and do not care whether
returns come in the form of capital gains or
dividend yields. - Therefore, one dividend policy is as good as
another.
92) High Dividends are Best
- Some investors may prefer a certain dividend now
over a risky expected capital gain in the future.
103) Low Dividends are Best
- Dividends are taxed immediately. Capital gains
are not taxed until the stock is sold. - Therefore, taxes on capital gains can be deferred
indefinitely.
11Do Dividends Matter?
- Other Considerations
- 1) Residual Dividend Theory
- The firm pays a dividend only if it has retained
earnings left after financing all profitable
investment opportunities. - This would maximize capital gains for
stockholders and minimize flotation costs of
issuing new common stock.
12Do Dividends Matter?
- 2) Clientele Effects
- Different investor clienteles prefer different
dividend payout levels. - Some firms, such as utilities, pay out over 70
of their earnings as dividends. These attract a
clientele that prefers high dividends. - Growth-oriented firms which pay low (or no)
dividends attract a clientele that prefers price
appreciation to dividends.
13Do Dividends Matter?
- 3) Information Effects
- Unexpected dividend increases usually cause stock
prices to rise, and unexpected dividend decreases
cause stock prices to fall. - Dividend changes convey information to the market
concerning the firms future prospects.
14Do Dividends Matter?
- 4) Agency Costs
- Paying dividends may reduce agency costs between
managers and shareholders. - Paying dividends reduces retained earnings and
forces the firm to raise external equity
financing. - Raising external equity subjects the firm to
scrutiny of regulators (SEC) and investors and
therefore helps monitor the performance of
managers.
15Do Dividends Matter?
- 5) Expectations Theory
- Investors form expectations concerning the amount
of a firms upcoming dividend. - Expectations are based on past dividends,
expected earnings, investment and financing
decisions, the economy, etc. - The stock price will likely react if the actual
dividend is different from the expected dividend.
16Yr-to-Yr Dividend Pmt Patterns
- A) Constant Dividend Payout Ratio if directors
declare a constant payout ratio of, for example,
30, then for every dollar of earnings available
to stockholders, 30 cents would be paid out as
dividends. - The ratio remains constant over time, but the
dollar value of dividends changes as earnings
change.
17Yr-to-Yr Dividend Pmt Patterns
- B) Stable Dollar Dividend Policy the firm
tries to pay a fixed dollar dividend each
quarter. - Firms and stockholders prefer stable dividends.
Decreasing the dividend sends a negative signal!
18Yr-to-Yr Dividend Pmt Patterns
- C) Small Regular Dividend plus Year-End Extras
- The firm pays a stable quarterly dividend and
includes an extra year-end dividend in prosperous
years. - By identifying the year-end dividend as extra,
directors hope to avoid signaling that this is a
permanent dividend.
19Dividend Payment Procedures
Jan.4 Jan.30 Feb.1
Mar. 11
Declare Ex-div. Record
Payment dividend date date
date
- 1) Declaration Date the board of directors
declares the dividend, determines the amount of
the dividend, and decides on the payment date.
20Dividend Payment Procedures
Jan.4 Jan.30 Feb.1
Mar. 11
Declare Ex-div. Record
Payment dividend date date
date
- 2) Ex-Dividend Date To receive the dividend,
you have to buy the stock before the ex-dividend
date. On this date, the stock begins trading
ex-dividend and the stock price falls
approximately by the amount of the dividend.
21Dividend Payment Procedures
Jan.4 Jan.30 Feb.1
Mar. 11
Declare Ex-div. Record
Payment dividend date date
date
- 3) Date of Record 2 days after the ex-dividend
date, the firm receives the list of stockholders
eligible for the dividend. - Often, a bank trust department acts as registrar
and maintains this list for the firm.
22Dividend Payment Procedures
Jan.4 Jan.30 Feb.1
Mar. 11
Declare Ex-div. Record
Payment dividend date date
date
- 4) Payment Date date on which the firm mails
the dividend checks to the shareholders of record.
23Stock Dividends and Stock Splits
- Stock dividend payment of additional shares of
stock to common stockholders. - Example Citizens Bancorporation of Maryland
announces a 5 stock dividend to all shareholders
of record. For each 100 shares held,
shareholders receive another 5 shares. - Does the shareholders wealth increase?
24Stock Dividends and Stock Splits
- Stock Split the firm increases the number of
shares outstanding and reduces the price of each
share. - Example Joule, Inc. announces a 3-for-2 stock
split. For each 100 shares held, shareholders
receive another 50 shares. - Does this increase shareholder wealth?
- Are a stock dividend and a stock split the same?
25Stock Dividends and Stock Splits
- Stock Splits and Stock Dividends are economically
the same the number of shares outstanding
increases and the price of each share drops. The
value of the firm does not change. - Example A 3-for-2 stock split is the same as a
50 stock dividend. For each 100 shares held,
shareholders receive another 50 shares.
26Stock Dividends and Stock Splits
- Effects on Shareholder Wealth these will cut
the company pie into more pieces but will not
create wealth. A 100 stock dividend (or a
2-for-1 stock split) gives shareholders 2
half-sized pieces for each full-sized piece they
previously owned. - For example, this would double the number of
shares, but would cause a 60 stock price to fall
to 30.
27Stock Dividends and Stock Splits
- Why bother?
- Proponents argue that these are used to reduce
high stock prices to a more popular trading
range (generally 15 to 70 per share). - Opponents argue that most stocks are purchased by
institutional investors who have millions of
dollars to invest and are indifferent to price
levels. Plus, stock splits and stock dividends
are expensive!
28Stock Dividend Example
- shares outstanding 1,000,000
- net income 6,000,000
- P/E 10
- 25 stock dividend.
- An investor has 120 shares. Does the value of
the investors shares change?
29- Before the 25 stock dividend
- EPS 6,000,000/1,000,000 6
- P/E P/6 10, so P 60 per share.
- Value 60 x 120 shares 7,200
- After the 25 stock dividend
- shares 1,000,000 x 1.25 1,250,000.
- EPS 6,000,000/1,250,000 4.80
- P/E P/4.80 10, so P 48 per share.
- Investor now has 120 x 1.25 150 shares.
- Value 48 x 150 7,200
30Stock DividendsIn-class Problem
- shares outstanding 250,000
- net income 750,000
- stock price 84
- 50 stock dividend.
- What is the new stock price?
31Hint
- stock price
- P/E net income
- shares
32- Before the 50 stock dividend
- EPS 750,000 / 250,000 3
- P/E 84 / 3 28.
- After the 50 stock dividend
- shares 250,000 x 1.50 375,000.
- EPS 750,000 / 375,000 2
- P/E P / 2 28, so P 56 per share.
- (a 50 stock dividend is equivalent to a
- 3-for-2 stock split)
33Stock Repurchases
- Stock Repurchases may be a good substitute for
cash dividends. - If the firm has excess cash, why not buy back
common stock?
34Stock Repurchases
- Repurchases drive up the stock price, producing
capital gains for shareholders. - Repurchases increase leverage, and can be used to
move toward the optimal capital structure. - Repurchases signal positive information to the
market - which increases stock price.
35Stock Repurchases
- Repurchases may be used to avoid a hostile
takeover. - Example T. Boone Pickens attempted raids on
Phillips Petroleum and Unocal in 1985. Both were
unsuccessful because the target firms undertook
stock repurchases.
36Stock Repurchases
- Methods
- Buy shares in the open market through a broker.
- Buy a large block by negotiating the purchase
with a large block holder, usually an institution
(targeted stock repurchase). - Tender offer offer to pay a specific price to
all current stockholders.