Google AI
The Times Australia
Business and Money

The last thing companies should be doing right now is paying dividends

  • Written by: Andrew Linden, Sessional Lecturer, PhD (Management) Candidate, School of Management, RMIT University

The economic heart attack induced by COVID-19 has revealed an ugly truth – many very large companies have too little cash to ride out sharp downturns.

Cash flow variability, and the inability to retain earnings to buffer that variability, is one of the most common reasons small businesses fail.

Because large companies have raised large amounts of cash through public offers, and take in large amounts of cash in their ordinary operations, they ought to be more resilient.

Yet even though the pandemic-inspired shutdowns are mere weeks old, many big companies[1] such as Virgin Australia and listed childcare providers are already pleading for or receiving public guarantees[2] and bailouts.

Other companies such as Flight Centre[3] and Cochlear[4] are rushing to raise extra funds though discounted share placements.

Bond and debt markets are experiencing severe problems[5], making it difficult for these companies to borrow.

Why are big companies so vulnerable?

Catastrophic declines in cash flow are only half the story.

The other half is the three-decade focus on maximising shareholder returns.

Companies have used four strategies to keep their share prices high and push them higher.

First, they have paid out profits to shareholders in the form of dividends, leaving them with less to build cash buffers, pay higher wages and reinvest in the business.

Reserve Bank research shows that over the past three decades dividend payouts have trended up over time to more than 80 cents[6] of every dollar of corporate profits.

In some companies dividends payouts exceed 100% of profits.

Read more: Australia's appetite for dividends could cannibalise economic growth[7]

Second, the same Reserve Bank research points to the increased use of share buy-backs and dividend reinvestment plans. The former boosts share prices by shrinking the stock of shares. The latter boosts demand for that stock.

Third, to lock in these historically high dividend payout ratios, shareholders, including institutional shareholders such as superannuation funds, have demanded boards agree to dividend guarantees[8].

In Australia these demands for higher and higher dividends have been partly driven by dividend imputation[9] which attaches a “refund” of company tax to dividend payments, making them even more valuable to mum and dad investors, and also to super funds, which have a heavy bias to equities.

Fourth, executives have been incentivised to make sure share prices climb higher and higher by remuneration packages that provide bonuses linked to high share prices.

Read more: Words that matter. What’s a franking credit? What’s dividend imputation? And what's 'retiree tax'?[10]

Finally, companies have had to borrow heavily [11]to cover ever increasing dividend payments and buybacks.

As Edward Altman, father of the Altman Z-score[12] for predicting bankruptcy, observes, the vast majority of US companies are now B rated (just above junk). Thirty years ago many were A rated.

Increased borrowing is making it hard for many companies to borrow more money or to issue bonds except at junk-grade interest rates.

The COVID-19 crisis has exposed the flaws of sucking liquidity out of companies to maximise shareholder returns as did the global financial crisis before it.

Directors need to consider their legal duties

Directors have a legal obligation not to trade while insolvent. Not having enough cash on hand to pay bills as and when they fall due triggers this obligation.

image APRA letter to financial institutions, April 7, 2020[13] In times of crisis where the solvency of corporations is a live question, preferencing shareholders over creditors and employees by paying dividends or buying back shares or borrowing to pay dividends is likely to be a breach of duties because it sucks even more liquidity out of the business and increases leverage. Both the Bank of England and New Zealand’s Reserve Bank have stopped their banks paying dividends[14]. On Tuesday Australia’s Prudential Regulation Authority took the unusual step of writing to banks asking them to be extremely cautious[15] about paying dividends. The Australian Shareholders’ Association has urged the government not to go further and issue a formal direction to banks to suspend dividend payments, saying shareholders rely on dividends to “cover their living expenses[16]”. Things can’t return to how they were before When the pandemic is over and the economy recovers it will become clear that the pre-crisis rates of shareholder returns were not sustainable. Until then, the public might be being asked to pick up the tab to save needlessly febrile companies, just as it has picked up a different sort of tab as a result of systemic misconduct[17] in banking justified by need to keep shareholder returns high. Post-crisis, companies should be made to wind back returns to shareholders in order to build adequate buffers, invest in their businesses and pay their workers more.

References

  1. ^ companies (www.abc.net.au)
  2. ^ guarantees (www.bloomberg.com)
  3. ^ Flight Centre (www.news.com.au)
  4. ^ Cochlear (www.afr.com)
  5. ^ experiencing severe problems (www.abc.net.au)
  6. ^ 80 cents (rba.gov.au)
  7. ^ Australia's appetite for dividends could cannibalise economic growth (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ dividend guarantees (www.telegraph.co.uk)
  9. ^ dividend imputation (theconversation.com)
  10. ^ Words that matter. What’s a franking credit? What’s dividend imputation? And what's 'retiree tax'? (theconversation.com)
  11. ^ borrow heavily (www.oecd.org)
  12. ^ Altman Z-score (seekingalpha.com)
  13. ^ APRA letter to financial institutions, April 7, 2020 (www.apra.gov.au)
  14. ^ paying dividends (www.smh.com.au)
  15. ^ extremely cautious (www.apra.gov.au)
  16. ^ cover their living expenses (www.afr.com)
  17. ^ systemic misconduct (theconversation.com)

Authors: Andrew Linden, Sessional Lecturer, PhD (Management) Candidate, School of Management, RMIT University

Read more https://theconversation.com/the-last-thing-companies-should-be-doing-right-now-is-paying-dividends-135928

Business Times

China's Auto Disruption

There was a time when buying a car was almost a reflex. You chose between familiar badges—Ford, Toyota, Nissan—and perhaps ...

Job scams create hiring risk for Australian businesses

By Lauren Anderson, Workplace Expert at Indeed Job scams are no longer the obvious, poorly written emails many Australians...

Eumundi Markets: One of the Sunshine Coast’s most powerful busine…

As Queensland prepares for Small Business Month in May, Experience Eumundi is highlighting the critical role the iconic Eum...

The Times Features

GINA WILLIAMS & GUY GHOUSE LIVE AT THE ELLINGTON’ D…

After 15 years of performing around the world, recording studio albums and unveiling two opera works...

The Quiet Luxury of Ink: Rediscovering the Joy of Writi…

In an age dominated by screens, taps and instant communication, the simple act of writing by hand ...

Owning a Restaurant: Buying One or Braving the Challeng…

Owning a restaurant has long been one of the most alluring—and misunderstood—paths in small busine...

Supermarket Prices Are Up — and So Is Dinner at a Modes…

For many Australians, the weekly grocery shop and a simple night out for dinner have quietly becom...

In 2006, The Devil Wears Prada Became One of the First …

When The Devil Wears Prada premiered in 2006, it was marketed as a sharp, entertaining adaptation ...

Protecting High-Value Homes Before Sale: A Practical Gu…

Selling a premium home is rarely just about listing and waiting. At the top end of the market, buy...

Eumundi Markets: One of the Sunshine Coast’s most power…

As Queensland prepares for Small Business Month in May, Experience Eumundi is highlighting the cri...

Club Med Expands Exclusive Collection Portfolio with a …

Club Med, the global leader in premium all-inclusive holidays for 75 years, and Central Group Capita...

Cost of living increases worry Farrer residents

COST OF LIVING ‘CRUNCH’ HITS FARRER HARD, THE NATIONALS HEAR During a visit to Albury this week...