Dividend, Dividend Policy: Course: FINC6001 Effective Period: September2019
Dividend, Dividend Policy: Course: FINC6001 Effective Period: September2019
Dividend, Dividend Policy: Course: FINC6001 Effective Period: September2019
Session 17
Sub Title Template (Optional)
Acknowledgement
Example:
Chapter
Dear Lecturers and Students: please use Gitman
chapter 14 for exercise
Chapter 14
Payout Policy
Before the dividend was declared, the key accounts of the firm were
as follows (dollar values quoted in thousands):
Cash $951,000 Dividends payable $0
Blank Blank Retained earnings $7,394,000
• Dividend Policy
– The plan of action to be followed whenever the firm
makes a dividend decision
• Legal Constraints
– Most states prohibit corporations from paying out as cash
dividends any portion of the firm’s “legal capital,” which is
typically measured by the par value of common stock
– Other states define legal capital to include not only the par
value of the common stock but also any paid-in capital in
excess of par
– Excess Earnings Accumulation Tax
• The tax the IRS levies on retained earnings above $250,000
for most businesses when it determines that the firm has
accumulated an excess of earnings to allow owners to delay
paying ordinary income taxes on dividends received
Example 14.4
In states where the firm’s legal capital is defined as the par value of its
common stock, the firm could pay out $340,000 ($200,000 + $140,000) in
cash dividends without impairing its capital. In states where the firm’s legal
capital includes all paid-in capital, the firm could pay out only $140,000 in
cash dividends.
Example 14.5
• Contractual Constraints
– Often, the firm’s ability to pay cash dividends is
constrained by restrictive provisions in a loan
agreement
– Generally, these constraints prohibit the payment
of cash dividends until the firm achieves a certain
level of earnings, or they may limit dividends to a
certain dollar amount or percentage of earnings
14.4 Factors Affecting Dividend Policy
(3 of 6)
• Growth Prospects
– The firm’s financial requirements are directly related to how
much it expects to grow and what assets it will need to
acquire
– A growth firm likely has to depend heavily on internal
financing through retained earnings, so it is likely to pay out
only a very small percentage of its earnings as dividends
– A more established firm is in a better position to pay out a
large proportion of its earnings, particularly if it has ready
sources of financing
14.4 Factors Affecting Dividend Policy
(4 of 6)
• Owner Considerations
– The firm must establish a policy that has a favorable effect on
the wealth of its owners
– One consideration is the tax status of a firm’s owners
• If a firm has a large percentage of wealthy stockholders
who have sizable incomes, it may decide to pay out a
lower percentage of its earnings to allow the owners to
delay the payment of taxes until they sell the stock
– A second consideration is the owners’ investment
opportunities
• A firm should not retain funds for investment in projects
yielding lower returns than the owners could obtain from
external investments of equal risk
14.4 Factors Affecting Dividend Policy
(5 of 6)
• Owner Considerations
– A final consideration is the potential dilution of
ownership
• If a firm pays out a high percentage of earnings,
new equity capital will have to be raised with
common stock
• The result of a new stock issue may be dilution
of both control and earnings for the existing
owners
14.4 Factors Affecting Dividend Policy
(6 of 6)
• Market Considerations
– Catering Theory
• A theory that says firms cater to the
preferences of investors, initiating or
increasing dividend payments during periods
in which high-dividend stocks are particularly
appealing to investors
14.5 Types of Dividend Policies (1 of 3)
• Stock Dividends
– The payment, to existing owners, of a dividend in the form of
stock
– Accounting Aspects
• Small (Ordinary) Stock Dividend
– A stock dividend representing less than 20% to 25% of
the common stock outstanding when the dividend is
declared
The current stockholders’ equity on the balance sheet of Garrison
Corporation, a distributorExample 14.8
of prefabricated cabinets,
(1 of 3)is as shown in
the following accounts:
The firm’s total stockholders’ equity has not changed; the company
has merely shifted funds among stockholders’ equity accounts.
14.6 Other Forms of Dividend (2 of 4)
• Stock Dividends
– Shareholder’s Viewpoint
• The shareholder receiving a stock dividend typically
receives nothing of value
• After the firm pays the dividend, the per-share value of
the shareholder’s stock decreases in proportion to the
dividend in such a way that the market value of his or her
total holdings in the firm remains unchanged
• Therefore, stock dividends are usually nontaxable
• The shareholder’s proportion of ownership in the firm
also remains the same, and as long as the firm’s earnings
remain unchanged, so does the dollar value of his or her
share of total earning
Example 14.9 (1 of 2)
• Stock Splits
– A method commonly used to lower the market price of a
firm’s stock by increasing the number of shares belonging to
each shareholder
– Reverse Stock Split
• A method used to raise the market price of a firm’s stock
by exchanging a certain number of outstanding shares for
one new share
Example 14.10
Blank
Because the stock will split 3 for 1, after the split Shakira will
own 780 shares (3 × 260 shares). She should expect the
market price of the stock to drop to $20 (1/3 × $60)
immediately after the split; the value of her after-split holding
will be $15,600 (780 shares × $20 per share). Because the
$15,600 value of her after-split holdings in Advanced
Technology stock exactly equals the before-split value of
$15,600, Shakira has experienced neither a gain nor a loss on
the stock as a result of the 3-for-1 split. Even if there were a
gain or loss attributable to the split, Shakira would not have
any tax liability unless she actually sold the stock and realized
that (or any other) gain or loss.
Review of Learning Goals (1 of 7)
• LG 1
– Understand cash payout procedures, their tax treatment, and
the role of dividend reinvestment plans.
• The board of directors makes the cash payout decision
and, for dividends, establishes the record and payment
dates
• As a result of tax-law changes, investors pay taxes on
corporate dividends at a maximum rate of 23.8%
• Some firms offer dividend reinvestment plans that allow
stockholders to acquire shares in lieu of cash dividends
Review of Learning Goals (2 of 7)
• LG 2
– Describe the residual theory of dividends and the key
arguments with regard to dividend irrelevance and relevance.
• The residual theory suggests that dividends should be viewed as
the earnings left after all acceptable investment opportunities
have been undertaken
• Miller and Modigliani argue in favor of dividend irrelevance,
using a perfect world in which market imperfections such as
transaction costs and taxes do not exist
• Gordon and Lintner advance the theory of dividend relevance,
basing their argument on the uncertainty-reducing effect of
dividends, supported by their bird-in-the-hand argument
• Empirical studies fail to provide clear support of dividend
relevance
• Even so, the actions of financial managers and stockholders tend
to support the belief that dividend policy does affect stock value
Review of Learning Goals (3 of 7)
• LG 3
– Discuss the key factors involved in establishing a dividend
policy.
• A firm’s dividend policy should provide for sufficient
financing and maximize stockholders’ wealth
• Dividend policy is affected by legal and contractual
constraints, by growth prospects, and by owner and
market considerations
• Legal constraints prohibit corporations from paying out as
cash dividends any portion of the firm’s “legal capital,” nor
can firms with overdue liabilities and legally insolvent or
bankrupt firms pay cash dividends
• Contractual constraints result from restrictive provisions in
the firm’s loan agreements
Review of Learning Goals (4 of 7)
• LG 3 (Cont.)
– Discuss the key factors involved in establishing a dividend
policy.
• Growth prospects affect the relative importance of
retaining earnings rather than paying them out in
dividends
• The tax status of owners, the owners’ investment
opportunities, and the potential dilution of ownership are
important owner considerations
• Finally, market considerations are related to the
stockholders’ preference for the continuous payment of
fixed or increasing streams of dividends
Review of Learning Goals (5 of 7)
• LG 4
– Review and evaluate the three basic types of dividend
policies.
• With a constant-payout-ratio dividend policy, the firm
pays a fixed percentage of earnings to the owners each
period; dividends move up and down with earnings, and
no dividend is paid when a loss occurs
• Under a regular dividend policy, the firm pays a fixed-
dollar dividend each period; it increases the amount of
dividends only after a proven increase in earnings
• The low-regular-and-extra dividend policy is similar to the
regular dividend policy except that it pays an extra
dividend when the firm’s earnings are higher than normal
Review of Learning Goals (6 of 7)
• LG 5
– Evaluate stock dividends from accounting, shareholder, and
company points of view.
• Firms may pay stock dividends as a replacement for or
supplement to cash dividends
• The payment of stock dividends involves a shifting of funds
between capital accounts rather than an outflow of funds
• Stock dividends do not change the market value of
stockholders’ holdings, proportion of ownership, or share of
total earnings
• Therefore, stock dividends are usually nontaxable
• However, stock dividends may satisfy owners and enable the
firm to preserve its market value without having to use cash
Review of Learning Goals (7 of 7)
• LG 6
– Explain stock splits and the firm’s motivation for undertaking
them.
• Stock splits are used to enhance trading activity of a firm’s
shares by lowering or raising their market price
• A stock split merely involves accounting adjustments; it
has no effect on the firm’s cash or on its capital structure
and is usually nontaxable
• To retire outstanding shares, firms can repurchase stock
in lieu of paying a cash dividend
• Reducing the number of outstanding shares increases
earnings per share and the market price per share
• Stock repurchases also defer the tax payments of
stockholders
Thank you,