What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?

This study examines the reactions of market makers and investors to large dividend increases to identify the motives for dividend increases. Uniquely, this study simultaneously tests the signaling and agency abatement motivations as explanations of the impact of dividend increases on stock prices an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ellis, R. Barry
Other Authors: Conover, James
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2536/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc25362019-10-23T10:11:38Z What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases? Ellis, R. Barry Stock exchanges. Stockholders. Dividends. stock market signaling agency abatement This study examines the reactions of market makers and investors to large dividend increases to identify the motives for dividend increases. Uniquely, this study simultaneously tests the signaling and agency abatement motivations as explanations of the impact of dividend increases on stock prices and bid-ask spreads. The agency abatement hypothesis argues that increased dividends constrict management's future behavior, abating the agency problem with shareholders. The signaling hypothesis asserts that dividend increases signal that managers expect higher or more stable cash flows in the future. Mean stock price responses to dividend increase announcements during 1995 are examined over both short ( _1, 0) and long ( _1, 504) windows. Changes in bid-ask spreads are examined over a short ( _1, 0) window and an intermediate (81 day) period. This study partitions dividend increases into a sample motivated by agency abatement and a sample motivated by cash flow signaling. Further, this study examines the agency abatement and cash flow signaling explanations of relative bid-ask spread responses to announcements of dividend increases. Estimated generalized least squares models of market reactions to sampled events support the agency abatement hypothesis over the cash flow signaling hypothesis as a motive for large dividend increases as measured by Tobin's Q and changes in the distribution of cash flows. University of North Texas Conover, James Tripathy, Niranjan Conover, Teresa L. Siddiqi, Mazhar 2000-05 Thesis or Dissertation Text oclc: 47163434 untcat: b2300393 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2536/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc2536 English Public Copyright Ellis, R. Barry Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Stock exchanges.
Stockholders.
Dividends.
stock market
signaling
agency abatement
spellingShingle Stock exchanges.
Stockholders.
Dividends.
stock market
signaling
agency abatement
Ellis, R. Barry
What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
description This study examines the reactions of market makers and investors to large dividend increases to identify the motives for dividend increases. Uniquely, this study simultaneously tests the signaling and agency abatement motivations as explanations of the impact of dividend increases on stock prices and bid-ask spreads. The agency abatement hypothesis argues that increased dividends constrict management's future behavior, abating the agency problem with shareholders. The signaling hypothesis asserts that dividend increases signal that managers expect higher or more stable cash flows in the future. Mean stock price responses to dividend increase announcements during 1995 are examined over both short ( _1, 0) and long ( _1, 504) windows. Changes in bid-ask spreads are examined over a short ( _1, 0) window and an intermediate (81 day) period. This study partitions dividend increases into a sample motivated by agency abatement and a sample motivated by cash flow signaling. Further, this study examines the agency abatement and cash flow signaling explanations of relative bid-ask spread responses to announcements of dividend increases. Estimated generalized least squares models of market reactions to sampled events support the agency abatement hypothesis over the cash flow signaling hypothesis as a motive for large dividend increases as measured by Tobin's Q and changes in the distribution of cash flows.
author2 Conover, James
author_facet Conover, James
Ellis, R. Barry
author Ellis, R. Barry
author_sort Ellis, R. Barry
title What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
title_short What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
title_full What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
title_fullStr What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
title_full_unstemmed What insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
title_sort what insight do market participants gain from dividend increases?
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2000
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2536/
work_keys_str_mv AT ellisrbarry whatinsightdomarketparticipantsgainfromdividendincreases
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