BUYBACKS VS DIVIDENDS: WHICH IS A BETTER CHOICE?
December 22, 2021
BUYBACKS VS DIVIDENDS:
WHICH IS A BETTER CHOICE?
When TCS announced its second
round of buyback of shares worth Rs.16,000 crore, it has once again raised the
debate on how should companies in India reward shareholders. Broadly, there are
two ways of rewarding shareholders viz. dividends and share buybacks. After the
Union Budget 2016 made dividends above Rs.1 million taxable at 10% in the hands
of the investors, there has been a major shift towards buybacks. At least,
large companies with a cash pile prefer to reward shareholders with buyback of
shares rather than through dividends. First a word on both these methods of
rewarding shareholders!
Dividends versus share buybacks
Dividends are distributed by
companies out of their profit after tax. It is a post-tax appropriation.
Dividends are cash pay-outs and to that extent they reduce the value of the
company. When we talk of value, we refer to the net worth of the company and
the market value. Both reduce to the extent of the dividends paid out. Normally,
companies that do not have too many investment projects to invest in will
prefer to pay out the profits as dividends to shareholders. A buyback, on the
other hand, is a reduction of capital. In India buying back shares for treasury
operations is not permitted, unlike the US. A buyback of shares has to be
necessarily for extinguishing capital only. Since buyback reduces the
outstanding capital, your profit is distributed across fewer shares and that
improves the EPS of the company.
Which is a better choice –
Dividends versus share buybacks?
Let us consider the choice of
dividends versus buybacks across some key parameters:
The first way to compare the
buyback of shares with the dividend method is based on the tax implications.
Here is where buybacks definitely score over dividends. When a company declares
dividends, there is a dividend distribution tax (DDT), then dividends are taxed
at 10% above Rs.1 million in the hands of the investors. Let us not forget that
dividends are a post-tax appropriation, which makes it 3 levels of taxation on
dividends. If buybacks are conducted through the market mechanism, then they
will be treated as long term capital gains. Even if you consider the 10% tax on
the LTCG, it works out more economical than paying out the cash as dividends.
How do dividends and buybacks
compare as a signal of valuation? Here again buybacks score over dividends.
When a company is willing to buy back the stock at a certain price it is
normally treated by the market as a base below which the price will not fall.
Practically, this need is not always true as we have seen in the case of
companies like PC Jewellers. For more stable names, companies do use buybacks
to signal that the stock is undervalued, although that may not be the case. In
case of dividends, there is no such signal that comes out from the
announcement, although at an overall market level, dividend yield does act as a
price support for the index.
Finally, what adds more value to
shareholders? Both, dividends and buybacks are signals to the shareholders that
the company is sitting on excess cash. Should shareholders take more cash in
the business as a positive signal? Let us take the case of dividends first.
When a company increases its dividend yield, you normally get to see the company’s
P/E reacting negatively. That is because higher dividends are seen as a signal
that there are not too many growth opportunities in the company. Since
shareholders pay for growth, a higher dividend payout does not help valuations.
That explains why OMCs quote at low valuations despite generous dividend
payouts. The same logic applies in case of buybacks too. When shares are bought
back, it is seen as a business with too much cash and limited investment
opportunities. That reduces the P/E of the company and negates any benefit from
higher EPS post buyback.
Source: angelbroking.in
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