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Dividend
Dividends are payments made by a corporation to its shareholder members. When a corporation earns a profit or surplus, that money can be put to two uses: it can either be re-invested in the business (called retained earnings), or it can be paid to the shareholders as a dividend. Many corporations retain a portion of their earnings and pay the remainder as a dividend.
For a joint stock company, a dividend is allocated as a fixed amount per share. Therefore, a shareholder receives a dividend in proportion to their shareholding. For the joint stock company, paying dividends is not an expense; rather, it is the division of an asset among shareholders. Public companies usually pay dividends on a fixed schedule, but may declare a dividend at any time, sometimes called a special dividend to distinguish it from a regular one.
Cooperatives, on the other hand, allocate dividends according to members' activity, so their dividends are often considered to be a pre-tax expense.
Dividends are usually settled on a cash basis, as a payment from the company to the shareholder. They can take other forms, such as store credits (common among retail consumers' cooperatives) and shares in the company (either newly-created shares or existing shares bought in the market.) Further, many public companies offer dividend reinvestment plans, which automatically use the cash dividend to purchase additional shares for the shareholder.
Ex?Dividend Day Price and Volume: The Case of 2003 Dividend Tax Cut
Yi Zhang (University of Nebraska, College of Business Administration), Kathleen A. Farrell (University of Nebraska, College of Business Administration) & Todd A...
Effect of the 2003 Dividend Tax Cut on Corporate Dividend Policy
Alon Brav (Duke University, Fuqua School of Business), John R. Graham (Duke University, Fuqua School of Business), Campbell R...
More on Dividend Repatriation
Following up on last week's post on the debate over whether to bring back the 2004 Act's dividend repatriation provision: Press Release, Levin, Dorgan Question Repatriation Lobbying Effort ataxing matter: Corporate Lbbying for "Repatriation Tax Break", by Linda Beale Bloomberg:...
?The Underwear Dividend?
Interesting thoughts on air travel security from Tunku Varadarajan, at the Daily Beast.
Copyright © 2009 This feed is for personal, non-commercial use only...
Hansen: Fee-and-Dividend not Cap-and-Trade
NASA?s James Hansen, one of the most prominent (and alarmist) climate scientists, argues against cap-and-trade plans in today?s NYT...
Why Apple shouldn?t pay a dividend
Brett Arends -- journalist and published author -- is a real thinker, not a blogger.
















