Abstract
Purpose Although it has often been studied in finance research, the relationship between dividend yields and stock returns remains an unresolved issue, especially in the Korean stock market. When firms continue to pay non-decreasing dividends for three or five years, they may establish a dividend reputation, which could affect this relationship. The author found firms that pay more dividends, larger firms, older firms, more profitable firms, less leveraged firms, firms with less volatile returns, firms with foreign holdings of more than 5%, and firms with more concentrated ownership build dividend reputations. The author also found that the relationship between dividend yields and future stock returns depends on a firm’s dividend reputation. The evidence shows that when firms with higher yields have dividend reputations, they produce higher future returns, whereas there is no significant relationship between yields and returns for firms with no reputation. These results are inconsistent with the findings of studies that use developed market data. In addition, when larger firms with higher growth potential and firms with less concentrated ownership have dividend reputations, future returns are higher.
Highlights
There are conflicting opinions in finance regarding the relationship between dividend yields and stock returns
This study examines the determinants of dividend reputation building for firms, and the association between dividend yields and stock returns for firms with and without dividend reputations
The coefficient estimates of ForeignSh and FMsh in the logit regressions imply that foreign holdings have no significant association with corporate dividend reputations but the presence of foreign holdings of more than 5% are significantly related to building reputations through dividend streams
Summary
There are conflicting opinions in finance regarding the relationship between dividend yields and stock returns. Results from LargeSh, MinorSh and ForeignSh reveal that firms with concentrated ownership and firms with relatively high foreign ownership do not decrease dividend payouts over the previous five years This implies that building a dividend reputation is not related to principal-agent conflicts, as explained by La Porta et al (2000) and Brav et al (2005). The significantly positive coefficient of LargeSh and significantly negative coefficient of MinorSh indicate firms with concentrated ownership tend to maintain or increase dividend payouts to establish a reputation, which suggests Korean firms’ actions are not consistent with the agency theory-based explanation for dividend policies (La Porta et al, 2000; Brav et al, 2005). Among firms in the smallest quintile, the lowest market-to-book quintiles have 118 firms with reputations over
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More From: Journal of Derivatives and Quantitative Studies: 선물연구
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