Corporate Finance (Chapter 9: Dividend Policy) Slide Set on Asymmetric Information and Dividends (signalling), created by Tanishq Chauhan on 01/02/2017.
Another argument for higher
dividends relies on the fact that investors are constantly seeking clues as to
which companies are most successful.
How can an investor separate the
marginally profitable companies from the real money makers?One clue they can use is dividends.
Slide 2
Dividends as Signals
Accounting numbers may lie, but
dividends require the firm to come up with hard cash.
A firm that reports good earnings,
but does not back it up with generous dividends may be tweaking its numbers.
But a high dividend policy will be
costly to firms that do not have the cash flow to support it.
Thus dividend increases signal a
company’s good fortune and its managers’ confidence in its future cash flows.
Slide 3
Information Content of Dividends
Since dividends are interpreted by
investors as a signal about future earnings, announcements of dividend cuts are
usually taken as bad news.
The information content of
dividends means that dividends are used as a source of information to investors
about a firm’s future performance.
Dividends as Signals
Slide 4
Dividends as Signals
If dividends are taxed more heavily
than capital gains, then a policy of paying high dividends would hurt firm
value.
Investors would avoid the shares of
such firms, causing their stock price to drop.
Plowing earnings back into the
firm, instead of declaring dividends, would produce the capital gains desired
by investors.
Companies with high retention rates
would be rewarded by investor demand for their shares and higher share prices.
Slide 5
Dividends as Signals
One
of the key differences between dividends and capital gains is that taxes on
dividends must be paid immediately.
Taxes on capital gains are deferred
until the shares are sold and the capital gains are realized.
Thus, investors can control when
they pay capital gains tax.
Slide 6
Dividends as Signals
Dividend Clientele Effects
Even if a clientele existed for
either high- or low-dividend yield stocks, as we have already seen, most such
clienteles have
already
been
satisfied.
Thus, changing your firm’s dividend
policy to suit that clientele would not lead to a change in the value of your
firm’s shares.
That is, changing your firm’s
policy would lead to a switch in investors holding your firm’s shares, but it
probably would not affect your firm’s value.
Slide 7
Share Repurchases Instead of Cash Div's?
From a firm’s perspective a share
repurchase is very similar to paying a cash dividend.
However, the tax treatment for
investors may be quite different.
A dividend leads to an immediate
tax obligation.
However, an investor has the option
of not tendering his/her shares to a repurchase offer and thus avoiding the
capital gains tax.