Taxation and Clientele Theory

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Corporate Finance (Chapter 9: Dividend Policy) Slide Set on Taxation and Clientele Theory, created by Tanishq Chauhan on 01/02/2017.
Tanishq Chauhan
Slide Set by Tanishq Chauhan, updated more than 1 year ago
Tanishq Chauhan
Created by Tanishq Chauhan about 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Slide 1

    Taxation and Clientele theory
    While it may be true that investors prefer companies paying higher dividends that doesn’t mean you can increase the value of your firm just by increasing its dividend payout. Afterall, lots of smart financial managers would have recognized this fact years ago. They would already have satisfied this clientele for high dividend stocks

Slide 2

    Taxation and Clientele theory
    You don’t hear business people saying there is a clientele for cars, so we should be manufacturing cars.  They know that clientele was probably satisfied years ago. Likewise, the clientele for high dividend stocks has a wide variety of stocks to choose from.  No one will notice if you add your firm to that already long list!

Slide 3

    Taxation
    Dividend payments are taxed more heavily than capital gains. So we can expect indv's to prefer income in form of cap. gains. Firms are taxed favorably on dividend income on the shares of other firms that they hold. Some institutions pay no tax at all, so they're indifferent b/w income earned in dividends or cap.gains.

Slide 4

    The 3 groups
    We might expect, some stocks to pay low dividends (shares held by individuals) some stocks to pay medium level dividends (shares held by tax-exempt Insti's) some stocks to pay high level dividends (shares held by Corporations ) So each type of stock (classified as per the dividend levels) will cater to its own clientele.

Slide 5

    MM and Clientele Theory
    CT arrives at some conclusion as MM i.e firm values are unaffected by dividend policy/stock prices. However CT also implies that eg: investors in high tax brackets should hold portfolios with low dividend yields - and vice versa. Thus CT is a step forward from MM, assigning more distinctive attributes to study the effects of dividend policy
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