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Bài giảng Management theory and practice Financial: Chapter 13
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Bài giảng Management theory and practice Financial: Chapter 13 được trình bày cụ thể với các vấn đề: Distribution level and firm value; Theories of investor preferences; Stock dividends and stock splits; Dividend reinvestment plans;... Mời các bạn cùng tìm hiểu và tham khảo nội dung thông tin tài liệu.
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Nội dung Text: Bài giảng Management theory and practice Financial: Chapter 13
- PowerPoint Presentation
prepared by
Traven Reed
Canadore College
- chapter 13
Distributions to
Shareholders: Dividends
and Repurchases
- Corporate Valuation and
Distribution to Shareholders
CH13
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-3
- Topics in Chapter
CH13
•
Distribution level and firm value
•
Theories of investor preferences
•
Signaling effects
•
Residual model
•
Stock repurchases
•
Stock dividends and stock splits
•
Dividend reinvestment plans
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-4
- What is “distribution policy”?
CH13
•
The distribution policy defines:
– The level of cash distributions to
shareholders
– The form of the distribution (dividend
vs. stock repurchase)
– The stability of the distribution
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-5
- Dividend Yields for Selected
Countries
CH13
World Stock Market (Index) Div. Yield %
Egypt 17.0
New Zealand 4.6
Argentina 3.4
Britain (FTSE All Share) 3.1
France 2.7
Canada (S&P/TSX Comp) 2.5
United States (S&P 500) 1.9
Japan 1.4
India (BSE-500) 0.7
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-6
- Do investors prefer high or low
payouts? There are three theories:
CH13
•
Dividends are irrelevant: Investors
don’t care about payout.
•
Bird-in-the-hand: Investors prefer a
high payout.
•
Tax preference: Investors prefer a
low payout, hence growth.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-7
- Dividend Irrelevance Theory
CH13
•
Investors are indifferent between
dividends and retention-generated
capital gains. If they want cash, they can
sell stock. If they don’t want cash, they
can use dividends to buy stock.
•
Modigliani-Miller support irrelevance.
•
Theory is based on unrealistic
assumptions (no taxes or brokerage
costs), hence may not be true. Need
empirical test.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-8
- Bird-in-the-Hand Theory
CH13
•
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
stock price.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-9
- Tax Preference Theory
CH13
•
Low payouts mean higher capital
gains. Capital gains taxes are
deferred.
•
This could cause investors to prefer
firms with low payouts, i.e., a high
payout results in a low stock price.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Implications of 3 Theories for
Managers
CH13
Theory Implication
Irrelevance Any payout OK
Bird-in-the-hand Set high payout
Tax preference Set low payout
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-11
- Impacts on Stock Price and
CH13 Cost of Equity
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Empirical Results of the
Dividend Theories
CH13
•
Empirical testing has not been able to
determine which theory, if any, is correct.
Thus, managers use judgment when
setting policy.
•
The portion of dividend-paying
companies has declined
•
Payout ratio remains stable at about
26% to 28%
•
Older firms tend to pay cash dividends
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- “Clientele effect”
CH13
•
Different groups of investors, or
clienteles, prefer different dividend
policies.
•
Firm’s 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 due to a change in payout
policy.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Information Content, or
Signaling hypothesis?
CH13
•
Investors view dividend changes as
signals of management’s view of the
future. Managers hate to cut
dividends, so won’t raise dividends
unless they think raise is sustainable.
•
Therefore, a stock price increase at
time of a dividend increase could
reflect higher expectations for future
EPS, not a desire for dividends.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Implications for
CH13 Dividend Stability
•
Clientele effect and information content
hypotheses imply that investors prefer
stable dividends
•
A stable policy means the regular cash
dividends should grow at a steady,
predictable rate
•
Reducing dividends to make funds
available for capital investment could
send incorrect signals to investors
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- What’s the “residual
distribution model”?
CH13
•
Find the reinvested earnings
needed for the capital budget.
•
Pay out any leftover earnings (the
residual) as either dividends or
stock repurchases.
•
This policy minimizes flotation and
equity signaling costs, hence
minimizes the WACC.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Using the Residual Model to
Calculate Distributions Paid
CH13
[( )( )]
Net Target Total
Distr. = – equity capital .
income
ratio budget
This long-run target distribution ratio
allows firms to meet equity requirements
with retained earnings.
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Residual Distribution Model:
Illustration
CH13
•
Capital budget: $800,000 (given).
•
Target capital structure: 40% debt,
60% equity. Need to be maintained.
•
Forecasted net income: $600,000
•
If all distributions are in the form of
dividends, how much of the
$600,000 should we pay out as
dividends?
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
- Residual Distr. Model:(cont’d)
CH13
•
Of the $800,000 capital budget,
0.6($800,000) = $480,000 must be
equity to keep at target capital structure.
So 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%
Copyright © 2011 by Nelson Education Ltd. 13-
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