Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Dividends Are Here To Stay
Why do companies pay dividends? According to finance theory, investors 
should be indifferent to dividends or capital gains assuming equal 
taxation. And when dividends are tax disadvantaged, investors should 
prefer no dividends and the subsequent increase in capital gains. 
Professor Douglas Skinner, an accounting professor at the University of 
Chicago, discusses the dividend puzzle. As is noted in DeAngelo, DeAngelo, and Skinner (2004), the top 25 dividend payers account for more than one-half of all dividend payments. Skinner points to continued 
dividend payments as a result of: 1) The signalling power of dividends. 
That is, dividends are a strong signal that the firm will continue to be
 able to pay dividends. 2) Dividends reduce the ability of managers to 
squander cash. 3) Widows, orphans, and regulations that force large 
institutions to invest in dividend paying stocks. As Dr. Skinner points 
out "Although we haven’t yet established the reason, the data are very 
clear: Dividends, even though they remain a puzzle, are here to stay."
