Personal Finance & Money Asked on February 18, 2021
Dividends could be paid out to investors through cash dividends or stock dividends.
In terms of the stock dividend, besides tax advantage when they don’t sell out the shares compared to cash dividends, what are the other benefits from this?
Take an example (from Investopedia):
if a company were to issue a 5% stock dividend, it would increase the number of shares by 5% (one share for every 20 owned). If there are one million shares in a company, this would translate into an additional 50,000 shares. If you owned 100 shares in the company, you’d receive five additional shares.
This, however, like the cash dividend, does not increase the value of the company. If the company was priced at $10 per share, the value of the company would be $10 million. After the stock dividend, the value will remain the same, but the share price will decrease to $9.52 to adjust for the dividend payout.
So originally, you own: 100*$10= $1000
After stock dividends, you own: 105* $9.52= 999,6
The value is the same as well as your percentage ownership since everyone gets 5% stock dividends as well. Only the number of stocks you hold increases, then how does it matter?
besides tax advantage when they don't sell out the shares compared to cash dividends, what are the other benefits from this?
None. Given there are more shares the only other benefit is more shares to vote, but now there are more shares, so the voting "part" is not more significant.
The idea is that if you need money (i.e. a cash dividend) you can actually sell the new shares.
Answered by TomTom on February 18, 2021
Importance of a stock dividend? None. It doesn't matter.
At best, you could make a case that after a stock dividend then because you own more shares, the compounding effect could be greater.
A stock dividend doesn't affect total cost basis but since you now own more shares, your cost basis per share is lowered. So that means a bit of additional bookkeeping, a minor disadvantage.
Answered by Bob Baerker on February 18, 2021
Dividends could be paid out to investors through cash dividends or stock dividends. In terms of the stock dividend, besides tax advantage when they don't sell out the shares compared to cash dividends, what are the other benefits from this?
A stock dividend is the combination of two:
The only source of benefit for stock investors are dividends and dividend equivalents (share buybacks) minus issues of new shares. When calculating the total return of a stock, you need to consider all cash movements between the company and its investors. A company moving cash to its investors is a profitable one and a good investment, whereas a company needing all the time more cash for its operation is not a profitable one.
A stock dividend moves cash in equal amounts in both directions, so it has no effect on the total return.
Answered by juhist on February 18, 2021
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