galway_blow_in
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Which would you prefer?
a) to receive a dividend which is likely to be taxed at 52%?
b) for the management of a great company to reinvest the spare cash in profitable ventures with a view to growing the value of your shareholding and enabling you to take gains whenever you like and only pay 33% tax?
And every time you receive a dividend payment the value of your stock reduces by precisely the same amount.with the dividend payer , you receive a percentage each quarter regardless of the underlying stock price , i can see the appeal for regular people who dont have to worry about the high tax bracket to begin with
sounds great but how do you time ( in a favourable way ) when to draw down a portion of your holding in a company which pays no dividend ? , even great companies go through extended ( at least a year ) periods when there stock is in the ditch , a certain airline went through it recently and is still nearly 20% off its all time high
with the dividend payer , you receive a percentage each quarter regardless of the underlying stock price , i can see the appeal for regular people who dont have to worry about the high tax bracket to begin with
Absolutely. And the dividend policy of most cash generating companies is tax driven, based on their country and largest shareholders circumstances. In the UK 2/3 private individuals who receive dividend income pay absolutely no tax on it. It other countries companies return shareholder funds in other ways, usually through share buybacks.Your opinion to sell some shares if one wants an income is purely a tax driven one.
And every time you receive a dividend payment the value of your stock reduces by precisely the same amount.
Dividends are not free money.
And every time you receive a dividend payment the value of your stock reduces by precisely the same amount.
Dividends are not free money.
I think it is very blase of you to say people shouldnt depend on dividend income as part of their income and should in your opinion just sell some shares if they want income.
that makes no sense to me
Many people want to park their money in great companies that pay good dividends and in the hope over time that their principal can grow too.
Hi Galway
You are confusing different things. If Shell pays a dividend of €1 per share, its share price should fall by €1, all other things being equal.
But there are other issues affecting the price of Shell. So Shell could pay a dividend of €1 and see its price fall by €6 or rise by €8.
The dividend payment is only one of the many issues which affect the share price.
There is no "win win". A company can't create magic money by paying high dividends.
The higher the dividend, the greater the price adjustment downwards, although this is not easy to see against the background of the other issues which affect the share price.
Brendan
In this case, all other things being equal, the share price would have risen even more if there hadn't been a dividend.the stock price often has regained what is lost within a relatively short period of time and you still have your dividend
Telecoms have pretty predictable cash generation patterns. Without differing tax treatment, an investor shouldn't care whether excess cashflow is returned to shareholders via dividend or share buybacks (at&t for example does both).why else would people buy the likes of telecoms if dividends are misleading ?
Pension funds don't care about the tax treatment, they invest for total return, and are investing for the positive cashflow generated by the company, not the dividend.dont pension funds own these boring utilities which are viewed as income creators ,
but why does it matter if the share price adjusts in order to facilitate the dividend payment ?,
Excellent analogy Galway. Could not actually have put it better myself.
I am surprised that so many people have difficulties understanding this.
Not everyone's in the same boat. I gave up work partly because I was sick of 50%+ tax (though mostly because I wanted to do something else). Now my dividends get taxed at 0-20%, much less than capital gains.
ONn the other hand I was lucky I didn't take your advice from your RTE slot of 16th Sep 2008.
Absolutely. And the dividend policy of most cash generating companies is tax driven, based on their country and largest shareholders circumstances. In the UK 2/3 private individuals who receive dividend income pay absolutely no tax on it. It other countries companies return shareholder funds in other ways, usually through share buybacks.
That was exactly my point. In the UK small retail investors, in particular pensioners, want dividends, because they can get 5k tax free.But in UK you can earn upto £5000 dividends tax free (i only learned this recently from another poster) which explains why so many people do not pay tax on dividends
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