532 CHAPTER 14 Distributions to Shareholders: Dividends and Repurchases
A Tale of Two Cash Distributions: Dividends
versus Stock Repurchases
Suppose a company’s current earnings are $400 million, it has 40 million shares of
stock, and it pays out 50 percent of its earnings as dividends. Earnings are expected to
grow at a constant rate of 5 percent, and the cost of equity is 10 percent. Its current
dividend per share is 0.50($400/40) $5. Using the dividend growth model, the cur-
rent stock price is:
.
As the year progresses, the stock should climb in price by 10 percent to $115.5, but
then fall by the amount of the dividend ($5.25) to $110.25 when the dividend is paid at
Year 1.^15 This process will be repeated each year, as shown in Figure 14-2. Notice that
the shareholders experience a 10 percent total return each year, with 5 percent as a
dividend yield and 5 percent as a capital gain. Also, the total expected market value of
equity after paying the dividend at the end of Year 1 is the price per share multiplied
by the number of shares:
S 1 $110.25(40 million) $4,410 million.
Supposethecompanydecidestouse50percentofitsearningstorepurchasestock
eachyearinsteadofpayingdividends.Tofindthecurrentpricepershare,wediscount
the total payments to shareholders and divide that by the current number of shares.
These payments are exactly equal to the total dividend payments in the original sce-
nario, so the current price is the same for both dividend policies, ignoring any taxes
P 0
D 1
rsg
D 0 (1g)
rsg
$5(10.05)
0.100.05
$5.25
0.05
$105
Stock Price
($)
0 12345
Year
160
140
120
100
Firm Pays
Dividends
Firm
Repurchases
Stock
FIGURE 14-2 Stock Repurchases versus Cash Dividends
(^15) This assumes no tax effects.