R38 Dividends and Share Repurchases Basics Q Bank PDF
R38 Dividends and Share Repurchases Basics Q Bank PDF
R38 Dividends and Share Repurchases Basics Q Bank PDF
world
LO.a: Describe regular cash dividends, extra dividends, liquidating dividends, stock
dividends, stock splits, and reverse stock splits, including their expected effect on
shareholders’ wealth and a company’s financial ratios.
2. K-Electric Power Company is a power generation company, while Procter and Gamble is a
consumer products company and Toyota Motors is an automobile manufacturing company.
Which of the following is most likely to issue special dividends for sharing profits with
shareholders in times of profitability, but conserve cash otherwise?
A. K-Electric Power Company.
B. Procter and Gamble.
C. Toyota Motors.
3. Which of the following is most likely to decrease the market value of a firm?
A. A stock dividend.
B. A special dividend.
C. A stock split.
4. In the previous year, a company had earnings of 100 million and retained 80 million. The
payout ratio was:
A. 80%.
B. 20%.
C. 50%.
5. Alan D’Cruz owns 50,000 shares of Matrix Manufacturing Company at the prevailing market
price of Rs.149.5 per share. Matrix declares a 15% stock dividend to all shareholders as per
record as of 31st December. The market price of the stock and D’Cruz ownership value in the
company given the following information is closest to:
Shares outstanding 1 billion
Earnings per share (EPS) Rs. 6.9
6. Santa Inc.’s common shares currently trade at a very low price and there is a risk of the
company being delisted from the stock exchange. Which of the following would be the most
appropriate action to consider?
A. Stock dividend.
B. Reverse stock split.
C. Stock split.
9. In a sales-driven pro forma analysis, net income grows from $1.58 million to $1.74 million.
Assuming a dividend payout ratio of 50%, the increase in retained earnings is closest to (in $
millions):
A. 0.79.
B. 0.87.
C. 0.91.
10. DeltaCom Company’s taxable income is 21.2% of sales. Assuming taxes of 33% and a
dividend payout of 50%, the net profit margin is closest to:
A. 12.65%.
B. 14.20%.
C. 16.28%.
12. On 15 May 2014, Company A reported to pay a dividend of € 1.10 per share in May 2014.
The ex-dividend date is 19 May and payment date is 22 June. An investor who wants to
receive the dividends should buy the shares by:
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
A. 19 May.
B. 22 June.
C. 18 May.
13. Supers Controlisque recently declared a quarterly dividend of $1.13 payable on Thursday,
March 6, to holders of record on Friday, February 21. What is most likely to be the last day
an investor could purchase Supers’ stock and still receive the quarterly dividend?
A. February 18.
B. February 23.
C. February 21.
14. Copper Suite has recently declared a regular quarterly dividend of Rs.2, payable on 10
March, with an ex-dividend date of 26 February. Given the following options include all
business days, which of the following is most likely to be the holder-of-record date assuming
trades settle three business days after the trade date?
A. 25 February.
B. 28 February.
C. 9 March.
15. The purchaser of a stock will not receive the dividend, if the stock was purchased on or after
the:
A. holder-of-record date.
B. ex-dividend date.
C. declaration date.
16. A company decides to repurchase stock by making an offer to repurchase a specific number
of shares at a price that is higher than the current market price. This is most likely referred to
as a:
A. tender offer.
B. premium offer.
C. first-rate offer.
18. A company wants to repurchase shares while avoiding a lengthy procedure for it. The
method of repurchase that the company would least likely adopt due to the long execution
time is:
A. Dutch auction.
B. fixed price tender offer.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
19. A company is deciding to repurchase 10 million shares of stock that has a current price of
$99. The forecasted information of shares available for purchase is presented below.
Number of Shares
Available for Purchase
Price (in millions)
$100.00 18.00
$99.80 10.00
$99.60 6.00
$99.40 2.00
$99.20 1.00
$99.00 1.00
Which of the following repurchase methods will most likely result in the average
repurchased cost being $99.60?
A. Open market repurchase.
B. Repurchase by direct negotiation.
C. Dutch auction.
LO.d: Calculate and compare the effect of a share repurchase on earnings per share when
1) the repurchase is financed with the company’s excess cash and 2) the company uses debt
to finance the repurchase.
20. A firm’s price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is 10.5. The firm has decided to repurchase shares
using external funds that have an after-tax cost of 6%. After the repurchase, the earnings per
share (EPS) will most likely:
A. increase.
B. decrease.
C. remain unchanged.
22. A firm’s P/E ratio is 8.7. It decides to repurchase shares using external funds. The maximum
after tax cost of the funds which results in EPS not declining will be:
A. 8.7%.
B. 10.2%.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
C. 11.5%.
23. Gregor, Inc., (GRE) plans to repurchase shares using borrowed funds. The following
information is compiled from the financial statements of the firm:
Share price at the time of buyback = $40
Shares outstanding before buyback = 80 million
EPS before buyback = $4.76
Earnings yield = $4.76/ $40 = 11.9%
After-tax cost of borrowing = 9%
Planned buyback = 0.75 million shares
The EPS after the buyback is closest to:
A. $4.56.
B. $4.77.
C. $5.03.
25. A company with 2 million shares outstanding and earnings of $4 million decides to use $20
million in idle cash to repurchase shares in the open market. The company’s shares are
trading at $100 per share. If the company uses the whole amount of idle cash to repurchase
shares at the market price, the company’s earnings per share will be closest to:
A. 1.11.
B. 2.00.
C. 2.22.
26. Cuzen Corp plans to borrow funds in order to repurchase 200,000 shares. The following
information is available:
Shares outstanding before buyback 4.7 million
Earnings per share before buyback $5.5
Share price at time of buyback $65
After-tax cost of borrowing 6%
27. What is the most likely impact on earnings per share (EPS) if borrowed funds are used to
finance a share repurchase where the after-tax cost of debt is greater than the earnings yield?
A. EPS decreases.
B. EPS increases.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
LO.e: Calculate the effect of a share repurchase on book value per share.
28. The market price of a company's share is $11 per share with a price-to-book value of 0.80. It
has 20 million shares outstanding and announces a buyback of 10% of its shares. If the
buyback is done at $11 per share, the post-buyback book value per share is closest to:
A. $10.
B. $11.
C. $14.
29. Techo Ltd. and Windows Inc. are operating in the same industry.
Techo Ltd. Windows Inc.
Share Price $53 $53
Shares outstanding before buyback 12 million 12 million
Book Value $475million $950 million
Both companies announce a $5 million share buyback. Which of the following statements is
most likely true about the book value per share (BVPS) for the two companies?
A. The BVPS does not change for either company.
B. The BVPS increases for Techno but decreases for Windows.
C. The BVPS increases for Windows but decreases for Techo.
30. The market price of a company's stock is $5 per share with 100 million shares outstanding.
The company decides to use its cash reserves to undertake a $20 million share buyback. Just
prior to the buyback, the company reports total assets of $1300 million and total liabilities of
$900 million. The company's book value per share after the share buyback is closest to:
A. $3.96.
B. $4.25.
C. $3.60.
LO.f: Explain why a cash dividend and a share repurchase of the same amount are
equivalent in terms of the effect on shareholders’ wealth, all else being equal.
31. The following information is extracted from the financial statements and reports of Meds Inc.
(Med):
32. Sparks Ltd. faces a choice to either repurchase shares at the current market price with its
positive cash flows or use that amount to pay a special cash dividend. Shareholders’ wealth
under the two options will be equivalent unless the:
A. company’s book value per share is greater than the current market price.
B. tax consequences for each choice aredissimilar.
C. company’s book value per share is less than the current market price.
33. Assume that a company is based in a country that has no taxes on dividends or capital gains.
If the company considers either paying a special dividend or repurchasing its own shares,
which of the following will the company shareholders most likely prefer?
A. Greater wealth if the company paid a special cash dividend.
B. Greater wealth if the company repurchased its shares.
C. Constant wealth under either a cash dividend or share repurchase program.
34. Analyst 1: All else equal, a cash dividend increases shareholder wealth as compared to a
share repurchase of the same amount.
Analyst 2: All else equal, a share repurchase increases shareholder wealth as compared to a
cash dividend of the same amount.
Which analyst’s statement is most likely correct?
A. Analyst 1.
B. Analyst 2.
C. Neither.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
Solutions
1. C is correct.
Increase in retained earnings = Retention ratio ∗ Net income= 0.65 ∗ 32.6 = 21.19
Total retained earnings balance = 21.19 + 15.2 = 36.39.
2. C is correct. Many cyclical firms (e.g., automakers) will use a special dividend to share
profits with shareholders when times are good but maintain the flexibility to conserve cash
when profits are down.
3. B is correct. With an irregular dividend a company pays cash and the share price drops. The
total number of shares outstanding remains the same. Hence the market value (share price x
number of shares outstanding) comes down. With the other two options, the number of shares
increases and the share price decrease. The overall market value, however, remains the same.
5. C is correct.
= Rs. 149.5
Stock price = = Rs. 130
1.15
Ownership value = Shares owned ∗ Stock price
= (50,000 ∗ 1.15) ∗ Rs. 130 = Rs. 7, 475,000
6. B is correct. A reverse stock split would increase the price per share of the stock.
7. C is correct. A stock dividend will decrease the price per share. A stock split will reduce the
price and earnings per share proportionately, leaving the price-to-earnings ratio constant.
8. B is correct. Stock splits and stock dividends do not impact financial ratios.
9. B is correct. The retained earnings in a pro forma analysis increases by net income less
dividends:
Dividend = Netincome ∗ Dividendpayoutratio= $1.74 million ∗ 50% = 0.87 million
Increaseinretainedearnings= $1.74 million − $0.87 million = 0.87 million
( )∗ –( )
10. B is correct. Net profit margin = =
– .
= (0.212 ∗ Sales) ∗ = 0.212 ∗ (1 – 0.33) = 14.20%
11. A is correct. A two-for-one stock split will double the amount of shares, thus reducing the
EPS to half of its pre-split value. P/E will remain unchanged because the price also reduces
by half and exactly cancels out the effect of the reduced EPS. The dividend payout ratio
remains unchanged because the same proportion of earnings will still be used after the split.
13. A is correct. If an investor purchases shares of stock on or after the ex-dividend date, the
dividend will not be paid. The ex-dividend day is always two business days before the
holder-of-record date and hence stock must be purchased two days before this date to receive
the dividend. Two days before February 21 is February 19; hence the last day the investor
can purchase shares and still receive the dividend is February 18.
14. B is correct. The holder-of-record date, 28 February, is two business days after the ex-
dividend date, 26 February.
15. B is correct. The chronology of a dividend payout is declaration date, ex-dividend date,
holder-of record date, and payment date. The ex-dividend date is the cutoff date for
purchasing the stock to receive dividend: stocks purchased on or after the ex-dividend date
will not receive the dividend.
16. A is correct. A company may repurchase stock by making a tender offer to repurchase a
specific number of shares at a price that is usually higher than the current market price.
17. C is correct. Dutch auctions begin with the company communicating to shareholders a
specific number of shares and a range of acceptable prices. In a fixed price tender offer, the
company announces a fixed number of shares to be repurchased and a fixed price. When
companies repurchase shares in the open market, they buy at market prices and in quantities
as conditions warrant.
18. C is correct. Of the methods listed, open market repurchases take the longest time to execute.
19. C is correct. A Dutch auction uncovers the minimum price at which the company can buy
back the desired number of shares with the company paying that price to all qualifying bids.
Here the qualifying bids are from $99 to $99.60 to satisfy the required 10 million share
requirement. Under a Dutch auction, 10 million shares can be purchased for $99.60 because
at that price point, sufficient volume is available in the shares.Using an open market share
repurchase process, shares are bought at prices that vary between $99 and $99.60. The open
market share repurchase will result in the average cost per share of $99.46.
20. A is correct. Convert P/E to the earnings yield (E/P): . = 9.5%. Because the after-tax cost
of the external funds is lower than the earnings yield (i.e., 6% < 9.5%), the EPS will increase
after the repurchase.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
21. B is correct.
$4,000,000
Currentearningspershare = = $2.00
2,000,000
$1,000,000
Numberofsharesrepurchased = = 40,000 shares
$25.00
Adjustednetincome = Currentnetincome − [debt ∗ after − taxcostofdebt]
= $4,000,000 − [$1,000,000 × 8% × (1 − 40%)] = $3,952,000
$3,952,000
Newearningspershare = = $2.02
[2,000,000 − 40,000]
24. C is correct. Share repurchase using borrowed funds will decrease EPS if the cost of debt is
greater than the earnings yield.
25. C is correct. At the current market price, the company can repurchase 200,000 shares ($20
million/$100 = 200,000 shares). The company would have 1,800,000 shares outstanding after
the repurchase (2 million shares − 200,000 shares = 1800,000 shares).
EPS before the buyback is $2.00 ($4 million/2 million shares = $2.00). Total earnings after
the buyback are the same because the company uses idle (nonearning) cash to purchase the
shares, but the number of shares outstanding is reduced to 1800,000. EPS increases to $2.22
($4 million /1.8 million shares).
26. C is correct.
Total earnings before buyback: $5.50 ∗ 4,700,000 shares = $25,850,000
Total amount of borrowing: $65 ∗ 200,000 ℎ = $13,000,000
After-tax cost of borrowing the amount of funds needed: $13,000,000 ∗ 0.06 = $780,000
Number of shares outstanding after buyback: 4,700,000 – 200,000 = 4,500,000
$ , , –$ ,
EPS after buyback: , ,
= $5.57
27. A is correct. In a repurchase, if the after tax cost of debt is greater than the earnings yield,
EPS decreases.
$
28. C is correct. The pre-buyback book value per share (BVPS) is .
= $13.75
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
Because the market price per share is less than BVPS, its BVPS should increase after the
share buyback.
Pre-buyback book value of equity 20 ∗ $13.75 = $275 million
Post-buyback book value of equity $275 million – (2 million ∗ $11) = $253 million
Post-buyback shares outstanding: 18 million shares outstanding (10% less)
$
Post-buyback BVPS = = $14.05
As per the calculation, the post-buyback BVPS is $14.05.
29. C is correct.
$
Share buyback for both companies = $ = 94,340 shares.
Remaining shares for both companies = 12 million − 94,340 = 11.906 million.
$
Current BVPS of Techo Ltd. = = $39.583.
The market price per share of $53 is greater than the BVPS of $39.593.
Book value after repurchase: $475 million - $5million = $470 million
$
BVPS = = $39.476
.
Change in BVPS= Decreased by $0.107
This is expected. When the market price is greater than BVPS, a share repurchase will reduce
the BVPS.
$
Windows Inc’s current BVPS = = $ 79.16.
The market price per share of $53 is less than the BVPS of $79.16.
Book value after repurchase: $950 million - $ 5 million = $945 million
$
BVPS = = $79.37
.
As expected the BVPS increases.
30. A is correct.
No. of shares purchased $ 4 million shares
=
$
Remaining no of shares after share 100 million – 4million = 96 million shares
buyback
Book value of the company after Total assets less cash used $380 million
buyback minus total liabilities:
($1300 - $20 – 900) millions
BVPS after buyback $380 million $3.96 per share
96 million
31. C is correct. The total wealth of the shareholder would remain the same with either method.
32. B is correct. For the two options to be equivalent with respect to shareholders’ wealth, the
amount of cash distributed and the taxation must be the same for both options.
Dividends and Share Repurchases – Question Bank www.ift.world
33. C is correct. When there are no taxes, there are no tax differences between dividends and
capital gains. All other things being equal, the effect on shareholder wealth of a dividend and
a share repurchase should be the same.
34. C is correct. All else equal, a cash dividend and a share repurchase of the same amount are
equivalent in terms of the effect on shareholders’ wealth.