Recap Week 7
1) What is the aim of corporate governance?
2) What approach to govern exist?
3) What governance mechanisms exist?
4) Name 3 key takeaways about corporate governance
1) corporate governance = arrangements that align the interests of managers & owners
2) Carrot (i.e., CEO compensation) and Stick (i.e., CEO turnover)
3) Board of directors, large shareholders, takeover, product market competition
4)
i) corporate governance adds value
ii) there is no one-size-fits-all approach to governance, e.g. Elon Musks compensation is only suited for Tesla
iii) there can be social/ political factors that affect governance quality
What is a dividend?
Dividend = money paid on a regular basis (mostly quarterly in US) by a company to its investors out of its profits
Define the term “share repurchase”
Share repurchase = firms issue cash to investors in exchange for a fraction of the company’s share outstanding, causing a decline in the number of share outstanding
What are the steps to dividend decisions?
Define the steps of the “dividend timeline”
1) Decleration Date: Board of Directors declares a payment of dividends
2) Ex-Dividend Date: On (or after) this date the security trades without its dividend
3) Record Date: A list of stockholders as of this date is prepared
4) Payment Date: Dividend checks are mailed to shareholders of recrod
Name and define the two different measures of dividend policy
1) Dividend payout = Dividends / Net Income
measures the percentage of earnings that the company pays in dividends
if net income is negative, payout ratio cannot be computed
2) Dividend yield = Divident per share / Stock price
Dividend per share is payment expressed as dollars/euros per share
Measures returns investors can make from dividends
What logic does the dividend policy in practice not follow?
What are the two dominant factors that drive dividend policies in practice?
in practice, dividend policy does not follow the logical process of starting with your investment opportunities & working its way down to residual cash
The two dominant factors that drive dividend policies in practice are:
Interia: Companies stick to their past dividend patterns
Peer influence: Companies want to behave like their peer group
What are the 6 main trends/ graphs on dividends?
1) dividends are sticky (=unbeständig)
2) dividends tend to follow earnings
3) Corporate life cycle & dividends
4) firms increasingly rely on share buybacks rather than dividends
5) Income Tax & dividends
investors have to pay tax for their dividend income
2003 Dividend Tax Reform: Dividends are taxed 15% (instead of 35%)
—> investors demand more dividends
6) Dividends are different across countries
Shao, Kwok & Guedhami (2010): Companies in more “conservative” countires are more likely to pay dividends
Considering “Taxes & Dividends”:
How do dividends influence firm value?
1) When there is no tax, dividends do not matter to firm value
if firm pays dividends, it has to issue new equity to fund the same projects -> share prices will fall by the same amount of dividends on ex-dividend day
2) If dividends create a tax disadvantage for investors (relative to capital gains)
dividends are bad for the investors and increasing dividends will reduce firm value
3) If dividends create a tax advantage for investors (relative to capital gains)
Dividends are good for investors and increasing dividends will increase firm value
If you consider a no tax scenario:
what would be the shares price behavior aorund the ex-dividend date?
Bild
in a world without taxes, the share price will fall by the amount of the dividend on the ex-date (time 0)
if the dividend is $1 per share, the price will be equal to P on the ex-date
Before ex-date (-1) ; Price = $ (P+1)
Ex date (0) ; Price = $ P
If you consider world with tax scenario:
what are implications for dividend policies?
In a wolrd with tax: dividend policies matter for value
With tax scenario
Assume that you are the owner of a stock that is approaching an ex-dividend day and you know that dollar dividend with certainty
in addition, assume that you have owned the stock for several years
what is the timeline? What is P / Pb / Pa / td / tcg ?
P = Price at which you bought the stock a “while” back
Pb = Price before the stock goes ex-divided
Pa = Price after the stock goes ex-divided
D = Dividends declared on stock
td & tcg = Tax paid on dividends & capital gains respectively
1) What are cash flows from selling before ex-dividend day
2) What are cash flows from selling after ex-dividend day
3) At what point woudl an average investor be indifferent between selling stocks before versus after dividend date?
4) What is the price chanfe after the ex-dividend date?
1) Cash flows from selling before ex-dividend day are:
CFb = Pb - (Pb - P) * tcg
2) Cash flow from selling after ex-dividend day are:
CFa = Pa - (Pa-P) * tcg + D(1-td)
3) an average investor would be indifferent between selling stocks before versus after dividend date:
Pb - (Pb-P) tcg = Pa - (Pa-P) * tcg + (1-td)
4) price change after ex-dividend date = Pb - Pa
Summarize the different tax rate scenarios and the ex-dividend day behavior in each case
Tax rates
Ex-dividend day behavior
If dividends & capital gains are taxed equally
Price change = Dividend
If dividends are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains
Price change < Dividend
If dividends are taxed at a lower rate than capital gains
Price change > Dividend
What are two wrong reasons to pay dividends?
1) The bird in the hand fallacy
2) Excess cash
Why is the bird in the hand fallacy a wrong reason to pay dividends?
The bird in the handy fallacy:
1) Argument:
dividends now are more certain than capital gains later
-> dividends are more valuabel than capital gains
-> stocks that pay dividends are more valuable than stocks that do not
2) BUT:
stock prices reduces on the ex-dividend day
any gain from dividend will be offset by stock reduction
Why is “we have excess cash” the wrong reason for paying dividends?
We have excess cash this year
the firm has excess cash on its hand this year + no investment this year —> hence it is good to give back money to investors
firm can always repurchase its stock instead of paying dividend
firm needs to consider future financing needs -> it may need cash in the future & it is expensive to raise external financing
What are the two right reasons for paying dividends?
1) Clientele Effect: Investors in your company like dividedns!
2) The signaling theory: Paying dividends signals to investors that your company has good cash flow prospects in the future
Explain the “clientele effect”
4 plus table
Investors may form clienteles based on their tax brackets
(Anleger können auf der Grundlage ihrer Steuerklassen Kundengruppen bilden)
Institutional investors in high tax brackets prefer stock that do not pay dividends [Desai and Jin (JFE 2011)
Group
Equities
Individuals in high tax brackets
Zero-to low-payout shares
Individuals in low tax brackets
Low-to medium-payout shares
Tax-free institutions
Medium-to high-payout shares
clientele effect not only based on tax preferences but also based on investor demographics
Becker and Weisbenner (JF 2011): Firms headquartered in areas with more seniors are significantly likely to pay dividends, initiate dividends & have higher dividend yields
What does the signaling theory implicate?
signaling theory implicates that investors are happy with dividend increase
However: there is no clear evidence thatn payout actually predicts a dfirms future performance
dividend increases and decreaes become less informative in recent years
1) What are share repurchases ?
2) What do share repurchases cause ?
3) What is the recent trend regarding share repurchases?
1) instead of paying dividends, firms may use excess cash to repurchase shares of their own stock
2) it causes a reduction in the number of shares outstanding
3)
discouraged in USA until 1982
legalized in UK in 1981
recently, share repurchase has become an important way of distrubuting earnings to shareholders
Case study: Share repurchases
consider the follwoing example:
consider a firm that wishes to distribute $100.000 to its shareholders ($1 per share):
What is the price per share?
Original Balance Sheet:
Assets
Liabilites & Equity
Cash 150.000
Other Assets 850.000
Value of Firm 1.000.000
Debt 0
Equity 1.000.000
Shares outstanding = 100.000
Price per share = 1.000.000/100.000 = 10$
Price per share = Value of firm/ shares outstanding
1) What to options does the company have to distribute the 100.000$
2) What does the balance sheet look like under each option
3) What is the price per share under each option?
1) Option 1: cash dividend of $100.000
Option 2: stock repurchase of $ 100.000
Shares outstanding = Total shares issued - number of shares repurchased
2 & 3)
Option 1: Balance sheet after $1 per share cash dividend
Liabilites and Equity
Cash $50.000
Other Assets. $850.000
Value of the Firm 900.000
Debt $0
Equity $ 900.000
Value of the Firm $ 900.000
Shares outstanding: 100.000
Price per Share = 900.000/ 100.000 = $9
Option 2: After stock repurchase
Liabilities and Equity
Cash 50.000
Value of firm 900.000
Equity 900.000
Shares outstanding: 90.000
Price per share = 900.000/ 90.000 = $10
Why do firms want to repurchase shares?
1) Undervaluation: When managers believe that the share price is temporarily depressed
2) Flexibility: when excess cash flows are only temporary
3) Tax benefits over dividends
4) Agency problems:
Insider control
Beneficial for insiders who hold stock options
keeps stock price higher - CEO compensation
Name and define the two different approaches that can be used to assess dividend policies
Approach 1: Free Cash FLows (FCF) vs Actual Dividend Payment
Step 1: How much did the company pay out during the period in question?
Step 2: How much the company could have paid out during the period in question
Step 3: How much do we trust that CEOs use their cash efficiently
How well did the company make their investment decisions
How well has my stock performed during the period in question
Approach 2: Peer Group Analysis
compare the dividend policy of your company to dividend policies of other similar firms
Assessing dividend policy
Considering FCF vs Actual Payout:
what is the fornular for FCF to shareholders and the total payouts and what do they stand for
Free Cash Flow to Shareholders = how much a firm can afford to pay dividends in a given year
Total payouts = How much a firm actually pays out
Free cash flow to shareholders
Total payouts
Net Income
-Depreciation & amortization
-Capital Expenditures
-Working capital needs
-preferred dividedns
+new debt issues
-debt repayments
Dividends + share repurchases
The Case of Disney
1) what can you say about the FCFs versus dividedns?
2) what was the cash balance?
3) what were the performance measures?
4) Should Disney pay more dividends?
1) Free Cash Flos (FCF) versus Dividends
Between 1994 & 2003, Disney generated $969 million in FCF each year
Between 1994 & 2003, Disney paid out $639 million in dividends and stock buybacks each year
2) Cash Balance: Disney had a cash balance of $ 4 billion at the end of 2003
3) Performance measures:
Between 1994 & 2003, Disney ROE is about 2% less than the cost of equity capital
poor investment quality further weakend by 2 events:
1995: Disney bought Cap Cities/ ABC for $19 billion
1998: Disney invested in Go.com: search engine + contents from ABC news
-> mostly failed investments!
Bottom line: Since Disney made poor investments (ROE<re)
-> it is better for Disney to return cash to investors as dividedns rather than retaining it!
According to: "Brav, Graham, Harvey & Michaely (JFE 2005): Payout policy in the 21st century”
What do managers believe about dividends?
payout policy is important -> can affect investment policy
repurchases are more flexible, and can be used to boots EPS -> therefore preferable
payout policy does convey information about the company but is not the most important means of conveying information
Zuletzt geändertvor 2 Jahren