Cash Dividend Alternatives

Companies can create value for their shareholders by paying cash dividends. There are also other methods for addressing the value of a share of stock. Read this chapter, which discusses some of these methods.

Repurchasing Shares

A share repurchase is when a company buys its own stock from public shareholders, thus reducing the number of shares outstanding.


Learning Objectives

Describe the different ways a company may repurchase its stock


Key Takeaways

Key Points

  • Since the market capitalization is unchanged and the number of shares outstanding drops, a share repurchase will lead to a corresponding increase in stock price.
  • The reduction of the shares outstanding means that even if profits remain the same, the earnings per share increase.
  • There are a number of methods for repurchasing shares, the most popular of which is open-market: the company buys back shares at the market dictated price if the price is favorable.

Key Terms

  • Repurchase: To buy back a company's own shares. The issuing company pays public shareholders for their shares.

An alternative to cash dividends is share repurchases. In a share repurchase, the issuing company purchases its own publicly traded shares, thus reducing the number of shares outstanding. The company then can either retire the shares, or hold them as treasury stock (non-circulating, but available for re-issuance).

When a company repurchases its own shares, it reduces the number of shares held by the public. The reduction of the shares outstanding means that even if profits remain the same, the earnings per share increase. Repurchasing shares when a company's share price is undervalued benefits non-selling shareholders and extracts value from shareholders who sell.

Repurchasing shares will lead to a corresponding increase in price of the shares still outstanding. The market capitalization of the company is unchanged, meaning that a reduction in the number of shares outstanding must be accompanied by an increase in stock price.

There are six primary repurchasing methods:

  1. Open Market: The firm buys its stock on the open market from shareholders when the price is favorable. This method is used for almost 75% of all repurchases.
  2. Selective Buy-Backs: The firm makes repurchase offers privately to some shareholders.
  3. Repurchase Put Rights: Put rights are the right of the seller to purchase at a certain price, set ahead of time. If the company has put rights on its shares, it may use them to repurchase shares at that price.
  4. Fixed Price Tender Offer: The firm announces a number of shares it is looking for and a fixed price they are willing to pay. Shareholders decide whether or not to sell their shares to the company.
  5. Dutch Auction Self-Tender Repurchase: The company announces a range of prices at which they are willing to repurchase. Shareholders voluntarily state the price at which they individually are willing to sell. The company then constructs the supply-curve, and then announces the purchase price. The company repurchases shares from all shareholders who stated a price at or below that repurchase price.
  6. Employee Share Scheme Buy-Back: The company repurchases shares held by or for employees or salaried directors of the company.