4. Dividend Policy Flashcards
1
Q
Procedure for paying dividends
A
- Declaration date: board declares a payment of dividend
- Cum-dividend date: the last day that the buyer of a stock is entitled to the dividend
- Ex-dividend date: the first day that the seller of a stock is entitled to the dividend
- Record date: firm prepares a list of all individuals believed to be stockholders as of that date
- Payment date
2
Q
Dividend irrelevance theory
A
- A firm’s total market value is independent of its dividend policy
- Investors can always create their own dividend policy, by selling and buying their stocks, through homemade leverage
3
Q
Why do companies still pay dividend instead of share repurchases?
A
- Clientele effect
- Information content
- Agency costs
4
Q
Clientele effect
A
- Different groups of stockholders prefer different dividend pay-out policies
- For example, pension funds prefer a steady flow of dividends
5
Q
Information content
A
- Managers hate to cut dividends
- Therefore, they will make sure, before they raise dividends, that they can sustain their dividend payments
6
Q
Agency costs
A
- Dividends are a disciplining tool
- They are an instrument in the hand of shareholders that leads managers to pay cash when investment opportunities are low
7
Q
Paper - Von Eije
Paper investigates dividends and share repurchases of European firms
Main findings
A
- The last few years, the amount of firms paying dividends is declining, while the amount of dividend paid increased
- Quarterly reporting firms are more transparent. Such ‘good guys’ are likely to pay out more to shareholders
- Large and older firms are more likely to pay higher dividends
- Firms with a higher book-to-market ratio are less likely to pay dividends
- Firms with lots of cash are less likely to pay dividend, but when they do, they pay larger amounts.