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Dividends or Buybacks--Which Are Better for Shareholders? Sponsored Links

Dividends or Buybacks--Which Are Better for Shareholders?

dave.

By David Van Knapp
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David Van Knapp
http://www.SensibleStocks.com

Dividends or Buybacks--Which Are Better for Shareholders?
Both dividends and share buybacks are often cited as ways
for a company to 'give back some money' to its
shareholders, as if they were functional equivalents. But
they are not equivalent at all.

In fact, the only similarity between dividends and share
buybacks is that the company uses a portion of its earnings
to pay for them. If you are a shareholder, that is really
your money, being managed by the corporation.

The Sensible Stock Investor should not be indifferent to
which method the company uses to 'return money' to its
shareholders. Let's see what the differences are and decide
what is better for the Sensible Stock Investor.

Dividends are simple: The company sends you money.
Dividends are usually declared quarterly, approved by the
Board of Directors, and sent out to shareholders a few
weeks later. The Board declares, say, that the dividend
will be $1.00 per share. If you own 100 shares, they send
you $100. What could be simpler?

Share repurchases are not complex either, but there's more
going on than with dividends. With share repurchase
programs, the Board authorizes using some of the company's
retained earnings to buy shares of itself on the open
market. The plan might be, for example, that over the next
six months, the company will purchase 1,000,000 shares of
itself, taking them in-house and therefore off the market.
If the stock sells for an average of $20 per share during
the program, the company will spend $20,000,000 to buy back
its own shares.

Why are these two very different corporate actions often
spoken of as equivalent ways to 'give money back' to
shareholders? Because, theoretically, in each case the
company is using some of its retained earnings to transfer
something of value to its shareholders. With dividends, the
'something of value' is money itself. The company sends
you a check. With share buybacks, the 'something of
value' (theoretically) comes in the form of an increase in
the value of each share remaining on the market. After the
company buys back X shares, every remaining share is
(theoretically) worth more to its owner. The corporate pie
has been sliced into fewer-and therefore slightly
larger-pieces. The total number of outstanding shares
declines, so each remaining share represents a larger
percentage of ownership of the company, a slightly larger
claim on a portion of its future earnings.

OK, say you are a shareholder in the company. Should you
care which route the company chooses to send you
'something of value'?

Here are the pros and cons of dividends:

? Pro: They are cash in your pocket, real money. There is
nothing theoretical about it. You can reinvest that money
in the company, or you can do anything else you want with
it. You can use it as income.

? Pro: Most dividend programs are tantamount to corporate
policy. Companies rarely cut or eliminate dividends. Even
though each dividend payout is a separate event, the
overall program is sacrosanct at most corporations that pay
dividends.

? Pro: Dividends help support a higher share price,
assuming that the market places a value on strong dividend
programs. Studies show that over long periods of time, the
market does place such a value on dividend programs.

? Dividends are closely watched and reported, so
information about them is easy to obtain. Over time,
companies establish dividend patterns which are pretty
predictable. Significant changes in the pattern are
reported instantly.

? Con: You must pay taxes on the dividends. However, the
federal income tax rate of 15% on dividends makes it one of
the least-taxed forms of income available.

Here are the pros and cons of share buybacks:

? Pro: Since no money is sent to you, you are not taxed.

? Pro/con: The share repurchase reduces the number of
shares circulating, thus increasing the value of the
remaining shares. However, to realize this increased value,
the market must reprice the remaining shares upwards. The
passage of something of value to you is only theoretical
unless and until this happens.

? Con: No money is sent to you. If you want the money
represented by the increased value, you must sell some of
your shares. The money you receive from the sale is then
taxed at either the long-term or short-term capital gains
rate (assuming that the sale is at a higher price than you
originally paid for the shares). The federal long-term rate
is 15%, the same as with dividends. The short-term rate is
your marginal tax rate, which is probably higher.

? Con: Share repurchase programs are 'one-offs,' not
regular programs at most corporations. They are not
predictable as to size or frequency.

? Con: Share repurchase programs are not monitored closely.
Many of them are never completed after their initial
announcement. Such failures are inconsistently reported in
the financial press.

? Con: Many companies repurchase shares in order to pay off
their executives (and other employees) on stock option
grants. The executives turn around and sell the shares
immediately, because they are part of their compensation
package. Thus, the shares are not taken out of circulation
at all, and other shares do not gain increased value as a
larger piece of the pie. Share buybacks do not return
'something of value' to the shareholders at all, but they
are rather a compensation expense to the company. The
executives, not the owners, are getting the money.

? Con: Often, share repurchase programs are announced when
the stock's price is highest. That is because the program
might be implemented in response to a burst in profits,
which drove the share price higher in the market. It might
also be because the company needs the shares now to pay off
options which are being exercised-the timing of which the
company cannot control.

It is an unfortunate fact that, at many companies,
management acts in a fashion which benefits itself more
than shareholders--even though the shareholders are the
owners of the firm. Why does this happen? In a large,
widely-held company, the Board of Directors--whose
fiduciary duty is to protect the long-term interests of the
shareholders--is really a captive of management. Management
proposes, and the Board rubber-stamps, ineffectively
executing its oversight function. That's what is at the
bottom of so many of the corporate scandals of the past
decade.

Contrast this with a privately-held firm. Some of these
firms can be quite large, but their ownership is not very
dispersed . At such a firm, the company runs things for the
benefit of its owners--who often make up the majority of
the Board. The Board is not captive of management,
management is a captive of the Board--which is as it should
be. At such firms, high dividend payouts are normally part
of the deal for the owners. Dividends rank well ahead of
buybacks as claims on corporate profits. Whatever earnings
are not required to fund current operations or expansion
are funneled directly to the owners. If you were the sole
owner of a company, isn't that what you would do?

So, if one of your investment goals is current income, it
should be obvious by now that dividends are far more
desirable than share repurchases. They come regularly (and
are often increased); they come in the form of cash; they
are taxed at a low rate; and they do not require you to
sell shares in order to realize the 'something of value'
being passed on to you.

Furthermore, the fact that management maintains a strong
dividend program suggests that the company is being run for
the well-being of its owners, not for management.
Management is probably making smarter decisions with the
retained earnings it has left (after dividends are paid),
which can only benefit you as a long-term shareholder.


----------------------------------------------------
Learn how to create and manage a portfolio of dividend
stocks. 'SENSIBLE STOCK INVESTING: How to Pick, Value, and
Manage Stocks' is a step-by-step guide for the individual
investor. This link takes you directly to the book's page
on Amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/059539342X/sr=1-1/qid=11553
81420/ref=sr_1_1/002-5852738-5260830?ie=UTF8&s=books
Or click here to learn more about the book:
http://www.SensibleStocks.com


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