Chapter 15
Chapter 15
Chapter 15
Learning Objectives
Overview
Dividend policy involves the decision to pay out earnings as dividends or to
retain and reinvest them in the firm. If the decision is made to distribute
income to stockholders, three key issues arise: (1) How much should be
distributed? (2) Should the distribution be in the form of dividends or should
the cash be passed on to shareholders by buying back stock? (3) How
stable should the distribution be?
Any change in dividend policy has both favorable and unfavorable effects on
the firms stock price: higher dividends mean higher immediate cash flows to
investors, which is good, but lower future growth, which is bad. The optimal
dividend policy balances these opposing forces and maximizes stock price.
Theories regarding the relationship between dividend payout and stock price
have been proposed: (1) dividend irrelevance, which states that dividend
policy has no effect on the firms stock price, and (2) the bird-in-the-hand
theory, which states that investors prefer dividends because they are less
risky than potential capital gains. In addition, the Tax Code encourages
many individual investors to prefer capital gains to dividends. Since 2003,
the maximum tax rate on dividends and long-term capital gains has been set
at 15%. This change lowered the tax disadvantage of dividends, but
reinvestment and the accompanying capital gains still have tax advantages
over dividends.
Dividend policy is further complicated due to signaling and clientele effects.
It is simply not possible to state that any one dividend policy is correct, and
hence it is impossible to develop a precise model for use in establishing
dividend policy. Thus, financial managers must consider a number of factors
when setting their firms dividend policies.
Outline