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Chapter 10
Picking the Equity Players
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You buy a stock, and when it goes up, you sell it. If it doesn’t go up, don’t buy it.
- Will Rogers
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Outline Introduction Stock selection philosophy Dividends and why they really do not
matter Investment styles Categories of stock
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Introduction Today’s focus is toward the overall
characteristics of portfolios• What principles in security selection are
particularly important in the construction and management of a portfolio?
• What are the principal categories of common stock?
• What are dividends?• What is preferred stock?
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Stock Selection Philosophy Fundamental analysis Technical analysis
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Fundamental Analysis A fundamental analyst tries to discern the logical
worth of a security based on its anticipated earnings stream
The fundamental analyst considers:• Financial statements• Industry conditions• Prospects for the economy• Etc.
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Technical Analysis A technical analyst attempts to predict the
supply and demand for a stock by observing the past series of stock prices
Financial statements and market conditions are of secondary importance to the technical analyst
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Dividends and Why They Really Do Not Matter
Types of dividends Issues surrounding the payment of
dividends Why dividends do not matter Theory versus practice Stock splits versus stock dividends
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Types of Dividends Cash dividends Stock dividends Property dividends Spin-offs Rights
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Cash Dividends Cash dividends are distributions of the
firm’s profits to the shareholders paid via a check from the company
Cash dividends can sometimes be reinvested via dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs)• Sometimes allow for purchase of additional
company shares at a discount
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Cash Dividends (cont’d) If shares are held in street name:
• The brokerage firm receives the dividend check
• The brokerage firm may automatically transfer funds to a money market account
• The brokerage firm ultimately allocates dividends to the shareholders
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Cash Dividends (cont’d) If the portfolio manager receives the
dividend check:• The funds are temporarily invested in a money
market instrument until:– They accumulate sufficiently to finance the
purchase of more securities or
– They are paid as income to the fund beneficiary
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Stock Dividends Stock dividends are paid in additional
shares of stock rather than in cash Typically announced as a percentage
• E.g., 10 percent stock dividends Popular when a firm lacks the funds to pay
a cash dividend Popular early in the firm’s life cycle
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Property Dividends A property dividend is the distribution of
physical goods to shareholders• E.g. a firm’s products
Property dividends are rare
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Spin-Offs In a spin-off, a parent firm divests itself of a
subsidiary and distributes all shares in the subsidiary proportionally to the parent firm’s shareholders
The parent gives away the subsidiary
Spin-offs are rare
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Rights The preemptive right means shareholders
have the ability to maintain the same percentage share of ownership in a corporation when the firm sells new shares
Existing shareholders can buy new stock at a discount from market price
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Rights (cont’d) Rights are actual securities that
shareholders can buy or sell
Rights have a limited life• Usually expire a few weeks after issued
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Rights (cont’d) Shareholders can do three things with
rights:• Sell the rights to someone else
• Use the rights to buy more share
• Allow the rights to expire– Like throwing away money
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Issues Surrounding the Payment of Dividends
Chronology of events Dividend growth rates
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Chronology of Events Date of declaration
• The day the board announces the dividend• Once declared, the dividend becomes a legal
liability of the company
Date of payment• The company mails dividend checks
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Chronology of Events (cont’d) Date of record
• Establishes who will receive dividend checks
• Shareholders of record are listed on the company records as being owners of the company on the date of record
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Chronology of Events (cont’d) Ex-dividend date
• Two business days prior to the date of record• If you buy the stock before the ex-dividend
date, you will get the next dividend• If you buy the stock on the ex-dividend date,
you will not get the next dividend• Eliminates any ambiguity about who is entitled
to the dividend
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Chronology of Events (cont’d)Example
Consider the following dividend announcement by AECI (a specialty chemical company) on August 2, 2000:
Notice is hereby given that an interim dividend of 30 cents per share, in respect of the year ending 31 December 2000, has been declared to holders of ordinary shares registered in the books of the Company at the close of business on 18 August 2000. Payment will be made from the office of the transfer secretaries in Johannesburg on 27 September 2000.
Identify the four relevant dividend dates.
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Chronology of Events (cont’d)Example (cont’d)
Solution: The date of declaration is August 2, 2000.
The date of record is August 18, 2000.
The date of payment is September 27, 2000.
The ex-dividend date is August 16, 2000.
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Dividend Growth Rates Corporations like to establish predictable
dividend payout patterns including an annual increase in their dividends
Many fundamental analysts focus on the dividend growth rate to determine value
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Dividend Growth Rates (cont’d)
The dividend discount model:
0 10
0
1
0
(1 )
where = the current dividend
= the dividend to be paid next year
the expected dividend growth rate
the discount factor according to the riskiness of the stock
the current
D g DP
k g k g
D
D
g
k
P
stock price
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Dividend Growth Rates (cont’d)
You can solve for the required rate of return, k:• Observe the current dividend and price• Obtain the growth rate using historical
information and analysts’ estimates• Solve for k:
0
0
(1 )D gk g
P
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Dividend Growth Rates (cont’d)
Example
Assume a company just paid a dividend of $1.20 per share. Historically, the company has increased its dividends by 3 percent annually with great consistency. No analyst estimates regarding the next dividend are available. The firm’s current stock price is $20 per share.
What is an estimate of the required rate of return for this stock?
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Dividend Growth Rates (cont’d)
Example (cont’d)
Solution: Using the numbers in the dividend discount model:
0
0
(1 )
1.20(1.03)0.03
200.0918 9.18%
D gk g
P
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Why Dividends Do Not Matter Payment of dividends reduces the balance in the
firm’s cash account• The firm should not be worth as much after paying a
dividend
The ex-dividend date determines whether or not you get the dividend• On the ex-dividend date, the price of a share of stock
tends to fall by about the amount of the dividend to be paid
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Theory Versus Practice Dividend policy is very important in
practice
Unexpected changes in dividend policy can result in significant changes in the market price of the associated common stock
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Theory Versus Practice (cont’d)
Most firms increase their dividend annually, and the market expects this• If management does not increase the dividend
as expected, the market views it as bad news Reducing or omitting a dividend is a very
bad signal An increase in dividends above what the
market expects is a good signal
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Stock Splits Versus Stock Dividends
Stock splits Why stock splits do not matter Why firms split their stock Stock dividends
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Stock Splits A stock split occurs when a firm changes
the number of shares of its capital stock without changing the aggregate value of these shares
A stock split is generally a neutral occurrence• The primary motivation is to reduce the price of
shares to bring it into an optimal trading range
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Stock Splits (cont’d) In a forward split (regular way split or
direct split), shareholders receive more shares as a result of the split• E.g., a two-for-one split
In a reverse split, the number of shares is reduced• E.g., 1-for-10 split
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Stock Splits (cont’d) Odd lot-generating splits are stock split
likely to result in many small investors holding odd lots• E.g., a 3-for-2 split
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Why Stock Splits Do Not Matter
Stock splits neither increase nor decrease investor’s wealth• You cannot increase the total amount available
by increasing the pieces of a pie
• E.g., a 2-for-1 split simply doubles the number of shares
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Why Firms Split Their Stock Some literature supports the existence of an
optimal trading range• A principal reason for splitting shares is “to
broaden the ownership base” Reverse splits are sometimes used to reduce
the number of shareholders• E.g., a 1-for-200 splits eliminates all
shareholders holding fewer than 200 shares
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Stock Dividends Stock dividends are not different from stock
splits for the investor• E.g., a 100 percent stock dividend is the same
as a 2-for-1split The difference between stock dividends and
stock split is an accounting phenomenon• A split alters the par value• A stock dividend means new shares are issued
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Investment Styles Value investing Growth investing Capitalization Integrating style and size
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Value Investing Definition Price/earnings ratio Price/book ratio
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Definition Value investors look for undervalued stock
Utilize the firm’s earnings history and balance sheet• PE ratio, price/book ratio
Place much emphasis on known facts
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Price/Earnings Ratio The PE ratio is stock price divided by EPS
A forward-looking PE uses earnings forecasts
A trailing PE uses historical earnings
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Price/Book Ratio The price/book ratio is the stock price
divided by book value per share• Book value is the firm’s assets minus its
liabilities• Book value is different from market value
Value investors look for low price/book ratios
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Growth Investing Growth investors look for price momentum
• Look for stocks that are in favor and have been advancing
• Look for stocks that are likely to be propelled even higher
The market moves in cycles• Many investors own both growth and value
stocks
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Capitalization Capitalization refers to the aggregate value
of a company’s common stock
Typical divisions are:• Large cap ($1 billion or more)• Mid-cap (between $500 million and $1 billion)• Small cap (less than $500 million)• Micro cap
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Integrating Style and Size Many money managers distribute their
assets across size and style spectrums
www.morningstar.com provides a style box that can classify a portfolio
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Categories of Stock Blue chip stock Income stocks Cyclical stocks Defensive stocks Growth stocks Speculative stocks Penny stocks
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Categories of Stock (cont’d) Categories are not mutually exclusive A note on stock symbols
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Blue Chip Stock Blue chip has become a colloquial term
meaning “high quality”• Some define blue chips as firms with a long,
uninterrupted history of dividend payments• The term blue chip lacks precise meaning, but
some examples are:– Coca-Cola– Union Pacific– General Mills
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Income Stocks Income stocks are those that historically
have paid a larger-than-average percentage of their net income as dividends• The proportion of net income paid out as
dividends is the payout ratio• The proportion of net income retained is the
retention ratio Examples include Consolidated Edison and
Allegheny Energy
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Cyclical Stocks Cyclical stocks are stocks whose fortunes
are directly tied to the state of the overall national economy
Examples include steel companies, industrial chemical firms, and automobile producers
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Defensive Stocks Defensive stocks are the opposite of
cyclical stocks• They are largely immune to changes in the
macroeconomy and have low betas
Examples include retail food chains, tobacco and alcohol firms, and utilities
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Growth Stocks Growth stocks do not pay out a high
percentage of their earnings as dividends• They reinvest most of their earnings into
investment opportunities
• Many growth stocks do pay dividends
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Speculative Stocks Speculative stocks are those that have the
potential to make their owners rich quickly Speculative stocks carry an above-average
level of risk Most speculative stocks are relatively new
companies with representation in the technology, bioresearch, and pharmaceutical industries
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Penny Stocks Penny stocks are inexpensive shares
Penny stocks sell for $1 per share or less
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Categories Are Not Mutually Exclusive
An income stock or a growth stock can also be a blue chip• E.g., Potomac Electric Power
Defensive or cyclical stocks can be growth stocks• E.g., Dow Chemical is a cyclical growth stock
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A Note on Stock Symbols Ticker symbols are identification codes Stock symbols have one to four letters
• One, two, or three letters identifies a stock listed on either the NYSE or the AMEX
• Four-digit symbols identify firms traded on the Nasdaq