Title: KEBIJAKAN DIVIDEN
1KEBIJAKAN DIVIDEN
2- Membiayai investasi baru yang menguntungkan?
- atau
- Membayar dividen untuk pemegang saham?
3Pembayaran Dividen
Payment day
Record day
Announcement date
Ex-dividend day
2-3 weeks
2-3 weeks
2-3 days
4Penurunan harga pada Ex-date
Ex date
-t . . . 2 1 0 1
2 . . . t
Price 10
Price 9
- The share price will fall by the amount of the
dividend on the ex date (Time 0). - If the dividend is 1 per share, the price will
be equal to 10 1 9 on the ex date. - Before ex date (Time 1) Dividend 0 Price
10 - On ex date (Time 0) Dividend 1 Price 9
5- Bila perusahaan menahan semua laba untuk
investasi yang mendatangkan laba, dividend yield
akan 0, namun harga saham akan meningkat,
menghasilkan capital gain yang lebih tinggi.
6- Bila perusahaan membayarkan laba sebagai dividen,
pemegang saham akan menerima kas atas investasi
yang ditanamkan, namun capital gain akan menurun,
karena kas yang sama tidak diinvestasikan ke
dalam perusahaan.
7Apakah investor lebih menyukai tingkat pembayaran
dividen tinggi atau rendah?
- Dividends are irrelevant
- Investors dont care about payout.
- Bird-in-the-hand
- Investors prefer a high payout.
- Tax preference
- Investors prefer a low payout, hence growth.
8Dividend Payout Ratios forValue Lines Selected
Industries
Industry Payout ratio Banking 38.29 Computer
Software Services 13.70 Drug 38.06 Electric
Utilities (Eastern U. S.) 67.09 Internet
n/a Semiconductors 24.91 Steel 51.96 Tobacco 55
.00 Water utilities 67.35
None of the internet companies included in the
Value Line Investment Survey paid a dividend.
9Early evidence on dividend policy Lintners
(1956) stylized facts
- Lintner (1956) in a series of interviews with
corporate managers observed the following facts - Firms have long-run target dividend payout
ratios mature companies pay out a high
proportion of their earnings, while young
companies have low payouts - Managers focus more on dividend changes than on
absolute levels - Dividend changes follow shifts in long-run,
sustainable earnings managers smooth dividends - Managers are reluctant to make dividend changes
that might have to be reversed
10The dividend debate Does dividend policy matter?
- The issue Should a firm be preoccupied with its
dividend policy? Does the choice of dividend
policy affect firm value? - Dividends are irrelevant M M (1961) showed
that, under certain assumptions, dividends do not
really matter because they do not affect firm
value - Dividends are bad Dividends create a tax
disadvantage for shareholders and destroy value - Dividends are good Dividends are good because
shareholders (or some of them) prefer to receive
them rather than not
11Dividend Irrelevance Theory
- Investors are indifferent between dividends and
retention-generated capital gains. If they want
cash, they can sell stock. If they dont want
cash, they can use dividends to buy stock. - Modigliani-Miller (1961) support irrelevance.
- Theory is based on unrealistic assumptions (no
taxes or brokerage costs), hence may not be true.
Need empirical test.
12M M Dividends are irrelevant
- Assume that
- There are no transaction costs from converting
price appreciation into cash - Firms that pay too much in dividends can issue
stock that is fairly priced and do not face
transaction costs - The firms investment decision is not affected by
its dividend decision and operating cash flows
are the same in each period - Managers of firms that pay too little in
dividends do not waste excess cash
13Two alternative views Dividends matter
- Dividends are good
- The clientele argument
- Dividends as signals
- Dividends may discipline managers
- Dividends are bad
- Taxes whenever dividends are taxed more heavily
than capital gains, firms should pay the lowest
cash dividend they can get away with and earnings
should be retained or used to repurchase shares
14Bird-in-the-Hand Theory
- Investors think dividends are less risky than
potential future capital gains, hence they like
dividends. - If so, investors would value high payout firms
more highly, i.e., a high payout would result in
a high P0.
15Dividends are good
- The Clientele argument
- There are stockholders who like dividends, either
because they value the regular cash payments or
because they do not face the tax disadvantage - Given the fact that there is a vast diversity
among investors in terms of preferences, it is no
surprise that investors may form clienteles based
upon their tax brackets - Thus, investors will cluster around firms whose
dividend policies match their preference (called
the clientele effect)
16- Dividends as signals
- By changing their dividend policy, firms send
signals about their future cash flows to market
participants - When firms increase dividends, they somehow
commit to those higher dividends, and, thus, send
a signal that they expect to have higher future
cash flows (share price increases) - Given that firms do not like to cut dividends,
firms that are forced to do so send a signal that
their financial future is troubling (share price
decreases)
17- Dividends discipline managers
- In firms with principal-agent problems between
stockholders and managers and the potential of
free cash flows being wasted, making a commitment
to pay dividends imposes discipline on managers
18Dividends are bad
- If dividends are taxed differently than capital
gains (dividends taxed as ordinary income) and
the marginal tax rate of dividends is higher than
that of capital gains, there exists a tax
disadvantage for those stockholders who receive
dividends - Even if ordinary income and capital gains are
taxed the same, dividends have a tax disadvantage
because investors do not have the choice of when
to report the dividend as it is the case with
capital gains
19Tax Preference Theory
- Retained earnings lead to capital gains, which
are taxed at lower rates than dividends 28
maximum vs. up to 38.6. Capital gains taxes are
also deferred. - This could cause investors to prefer firms with
low payouts, i.e., a high payout results in a low
P0.
20- The tax disadvantage of dividends leads to the
following conclusions - Firms whose stockholders are primarily
individuals should pay a lower dividend compared
to firms that are mainly owned by institutional
investors (they are under a tax-exempt status) - The higher the income level of the firms
investors, the lower the dividend paid by the
firm should be - As the tax disadvantage of dividends increases,
the aggregate amount of dividends paid should
decrease
21Some not so good reasons for paying dividends
- The Bird-in-the-hand fallacy
- Risk-averse investors may prefer the certainty of
dividend payments over the uncertainty of capital
gains - The proper comparison is between dividends today
and an almost equivalent amount of price
appreciation today - The evidence shows that share prices drop on the
ex-dividend day (firms that pay dividends
experience a decline in their share price on that
day)
22- The excess cash hypothesis
- A firm has excess cash in a year and decides to
return it to its stockholders through a dividend
(assuming no investment projects in that year) - If the lack of investment projects is temporary,
then firm should consider future financing needs
and the cost of raising capital - Why not return the excess cash through a share
repurchase, given the evidence on firms
reluctance to change dividends?
23Double taxation of dividends
- The issue Corporate income was taxed twice, at
the corporate level and at the stockholder level - Corporate earnings were taxed at 35 and
shareholders receiving dividends were also faced
with marginal tax rates as high as 38.6
(combined tax rate could be as high as 60) - In the US, The Bush administration passed
legislation that would limit the tax rates for
dividends to a maximum of 15 during the period
2003-2008 - The capital gains tax was also reduced from 20
to 15
24Signaling, hypothesis?
- Managers hate to cut dividends, so wont raise
dividends unless they think raise is sustainable.
So, investors view dividend increases as signals
of managements view of the future. - Therefore, a stock price increase at time of a
dividend increase could reflect higher
expectations for future EPS, not a desire for
dividends.
25The clientele effect
- Different groups of investors, or clienteles,
prefer different dividend policies. - Firms past dividend policy determines its
current clientele of investors. - Clientele effects impede changing dividend
policy. Taxes brokerage costs hurt investors
who have to switch companies.
26The residual dividend model
- Find the retained earnings needed for the capital
budget. - Pay out any leftover earnings (the residual) as
dividends. - This policy minimizes flotation and equity
signaling costs, hence minimizes the WACC.
27Using the Residual Model to Calculate Dividends
Paid
28Data for SSC
- Capital budget 800,000. Given.
- Target capital structure 40 debt, 60 equity.
Want to maintain. - Forecasted net income 600,000.
- How much of the 600,000 should we pay out as
dividends?
29Of the 800,000 capital budget, 0.6(800,000)
480,000 must be equity to keep at target capital
structure. 0.4(800,000) 320,000 will be
debt. With 600,000 of net income, the residual
is 600,000 - 480,000 120,000 dividends
paid. Payout ratio 120,000/600,000
0.20 20.
30How would a drop in NI to 400,000 affect the
dividend? A rise to 800,000?
- NI 400,000 Need 480,000 of equity, so
should retain the whole 400,000. Dividends 0. - NI 800,000 Dividends 800,000 - 480,000
320,000. Payout 320,000/800,000 40.
31How would a change in investment opportunities
affect dividend under the residual policy?
- Fewer good investments would lead to smaller
capital budget, hence to a higher dividend
payout. - More good investments would lead to a lower
dividend payout.
32Advantages and Disadvantages of the Residual
Dividend Policy
- Advantages Minimizes new stock issues and
flotation costs. - Disadvantages Results in variable dividends,
sends conflicting signals, increases risk, and
doesnt appeal to any specific clientele. - Conclusion Consider residual policy when
setting target payout, but dont follow it
rigidly.
33Which theory is most correct?
- Empirical testing has not been able to determine
which theory, if any, is correct. - Thus, managers use judgment when setting policy.
- Analysis is used, but it must be applied with
judgment.
34Implications for Managers
Theory
Implication
Irrelevance
Any payout OK
Bird-in-the-hand
Set high payout
Tax preference
Set low payout
But which, if any, is correct???
35Setting Dividend Policy
- Forecast capital needs over a planning horizon,
often 5 years. - Set a target capital structure.
- Estimate annual equity needs.
- Set target payout based on the residual model.
- Generally, some dividend growth rate emerges.
Maintain target growth rate if possible, varying
capital structure somewhat if necessary.
36Appendix
37Example 1 Dividend irrelevance
- Suppose that Illini Corp. has after-tax operating
income of 100m growing at 5 per year and its
cost of capital is 10 - Assume that the firm has reinvestment needs of
50m also growing at 5 per year and that it has
105m outstanding shares - The firm pays out any residual cash flows as
dividends each year - The FCFF EBIT(1 t) Reinvestment needs
100m - 50m 50m
38- The firms value (using the Gordon growth model)
is - FCFF(1 g)/(WACC g) 50(1.05)/(0.10 0.05)
1,050m - The price per share is 1,050m/105m 10
- The dividend per share is 50m/105m 0.476
- The value per share is 10 0.48 10.48
39- Case 1 UIUC Corp. decides to double its
dividends, but its investment needs remain the
same, meaning that the firm has to raise 50m - Suppose the firm can issue stock worth 50m at no
cost - The existing shareholders receive dividends of
100m or dividends per share equal to 100m/105m
0.953 - Given no change in the firms cash flows, the
growth rate of cash flows or the cost of capital,
the firms value has not changed
40- However, existing shareholders now own 1,000m
and new shareholders 50m of the firm - Thus, the price per share for existing
shareholders is 1,000m/105m 9.523 - The value per share for existing shareholders is
9.523 0.953 10.476 - The average shareholder is indifferent to this
change in dividend policy (higher dividend per
share is offset by lower price per share)
41- Case 2 UIUC Corp. decides to eliminate dividends
and retain the 50m - Total value of the firm is
- PV of after-tax operating cash flows Cash
balance - 1,050m 50m 1,100m
- The value per share is 1,100m/105m 10.476,
meaning that the increase in share price is
offset by the loss of dividends