CHAPTER 11Dividends and Stock Repurchases (Apple Inc.)
This chapter will look at why and how firms return cash to their stockholders in the form of dividends and stock repurchases. We will first discuss the theory and empirical facts regarding dividends. Then we will use Apple Inc. (Apple) as an example to discuss corporate dividend policy. Next, we will discuss stock repurchases and Apple's recent use of repatriated funds to repurchase shares.
THE THEORY OF DIVIDEND POLICY
To discuss the theory behind corporate dividends, we begin (as we often do) with M&M (Miller and Modigliani). With dividends we start with M&M (1961). Let's assume an M&M world with efficient markets (there is no information asymmetry; i.e., everyone knows everything, and everyone knows it at the same time, zero transaction costs, zero taxes, and costless arbitrage). Remember that we lived in this world when we discussed capital structure in Chapter 6.
In an M&M world, dividend policy does not matter. M&M (1961) shows that dividends are a zero net present value (NPV) transaction (i.e., paying or not paying dividends does not change the value of the firm or the stock). The logic for why dividends don't matter in an M&M world is simple: an investor in this world is indifferent between owning a stock worth $50 and owning a stock worth $48 plus $2 in cash because the investor can costlessly arbitrage.
The arbitrage argument is that if an individual prefers dividends and the stock she owns does not pay dividends, ...
Get Lessons in Corporate Finance, 2nd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.