The Effects of Dividend Payout, Stability, and Smoothing on Firm Value (original) (raw)
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On the Importance of Measuring Payout Yield: Implications for Empirical Asset Pricing
The Journal of Finance, 2007
Previous research showed that the dividend price ratio process changed remarkably during the 1980's and 1990's, but that the total payout ratio (dividends plus repurchases over price) changed very little. We investigate implications of this difference for asset pricing models. In particular, the widely documented decline in the predictive power of dividends for excess stock returns in time series regressions in recent data is vastly overstated. Statistically and economically significant predictability is found at both short and long horizons when total payout yield is used instead of dividend yield. We also provide evidence that total payout yield has information in the cross-section for expected stock returns exceeding that of dividend yield and that the high minus low payout yield portfolio is a priced factor. The evidence throughout is shown to be robust to the method of measuring total payouts.
The main purpose of this research paper is to find whether there is a relationship between the dividend policy and stock price. The dividend policy is a wide topic that requires a lot of extensive research and time in order to analyze everything because there are many several different theories, claims, concerns and suggestions regarding the dividend policy and its impact in the stock prices. However, this research will mainly focus in the most three prominent theories know as Bird-in-hands, Irrelevance of dividend policy and Relevance of dividend policy theory. In addition, the literature analysis will reveal how managers control their firm’s stock price value.