Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I found this great article which articulates what I have always believed Dumb idea: Dividends are good for you Incidentally the follow-on discussion shows how dumb people are in their love of dividends
If you read Modigliani and Miller what they argue is that dividend policy is irrelevant unless the company also changed its investment policy.
I have commented on Rory's algorithm before. To me it just isn't statistically significant and without a supporting economic argument as to why his mechanocal algorithm should outperform I don't buy it.
Although Merton Miller did win a Nobel Prize for this work so I guess we shouldn't just dismiss it out of hand...
the evidence that investing with a distinct bias towards dividend tends to generate better outcomes is fairly overwhelming. The reason lies in human behaviour both on the part of investors and management.
Investors tend to overpay for the hope of high(er) growth and undervalue steady/boring.
Management sees a pile of cash as a way of building up a bigger company by way of acquisition - another mountain of evidence confirms that the majority of acquisitions destroy value for the acquirer's shareholders.
As an investor i love the idea that paying a meaty dividend places a substantial discipline on management to husband resources : It may seem like a trivial point but a substantial dividend reduces the likelihood of accounting tricks (or perhaps they are more likely to come to light?).
Although Merton Miller did win a Nobel Prize for this work so I guess we shouldn't just dismiss it out of hand...
It's available at the Berkshire Hathaway website (apologies I am not an experienced enough poster to be able to include a link, apparently, perhaps someone else might do the needful) - the piece on the dividend issue is at pages 19-21. Well worth a read.
{Off topic, predicts the defined benefit pension investment crisis. Again, can't post a link.}