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Dividend puzzle

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The dividend puzzle, as originally framed by Fischer Black, relates to two interrelated questions in corporate finance and financial economics: why do corporations pay dividends; and why do investors "pay attention" to dividends?

A key observation here, is that companies that pay dividends are rewarded by investors with higher valuations (in fact, there are several dividend valuation models; see The Theory of Investment Value). What is puzzling, however, is that it should not matter to investors whether a firm pays dividends or not: as an owner of the firm, the investor should be indifferent as to receiving dividends or having these re-invested in the business; see Modigliani–Miller theorem. A further and related observation is that these dividends attract a higher tax rate as compared, e.g., to capital gains from the firm repurchasing shares as an alternative payout policy. For other considerations, see dividend policy and Pecking order theory.

A range of explanations is provided. The long term holders of these stocks are typically institutional investors. These (often) have a need for the liquidity provided by dividends; further, many, such as pension funds, are tax-exempt. (See Clientele effect.) From the signalling perspective, cash dividends are "a useful device" to convey insider information about corporate performance to outsiders, and thereby reduce information asymmetry; see Dividend signaling hypothesis. Behavioral economics posits that for investors, outcomes received with certainty are overweighed relative to uncertain outcomes; see Prospect theory. Thus here, respectively, investors will prefer (and pay for) cash dividends, as opposed to reinvestment in the firm with possible consequent price appreciation.

References

  1. Fischer Black (1976). "The dividend puzzle," The Journal of Portfolio Management, 1976.2.2:5-8.
  2. ^ George M. Frankfurter (1999). "What is the Puzzle in “The Dividend Puzzle?,", The Journal of Investing, 8(2):76-85.
  3. Kwok-Chiu Lam (2014). "The Dividend Puzzle: A Summary Review of Explanations," Journal of Finance and Investment Analysis, vol. 3, no.4, 2014, 31-37.
  4. Erhan Kilincarslan (2022). "Demystifying the ‘dividend puzzle’ and making sense of government regulations in times of pandemics," lse.ac.uk
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