Sentences with phrase «shareholders via a dividend»

However, CLX management has been more focused on returning excess capital to shareholders via dividends.
At 44.4 %, however, less than half of the company's earnings are being returned to shareholders via a dividend, providing plenty of room for more increases going forward.
The company has been returning a lot of capital to shareholders via dividends and buybacks.
Most of the company's earnings are sent off to shareholders via dividends and buybacks, withholding only a minority portion of earnings for future growth.
U.S. companies have been more generous than ever in returning excess cash to shareholders via dividends.
A company's net profits can be allocated to shareholders via a dividend.
Given the government support to improve dividend policies, these companies tend to return a greater share of earnings to shareholders via dividends.
Obviously, returning cash to shareholders via dividends is firmly embedded in the company's culture.
The management is dedicated to returning cash to shareholders via dividends and buybacks.
So as a dividend growth investor, a primary consideration for me is how a company rewards its shareholders via a dividend and how it grows that payout.
Except for the exercise of stock options, in each case the increases in net worth were attributable to increases in retained earnings, i.e., net income minus cash distributed to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases.

Not exact matches

«While the company faces a number of significant challenges, including the continued rise of Amazon and Google, its high margin and large sales figures enable the company to generate significant free cash flow, which it increasingly returns to shareholders via buybacks and dividends
Corporations will boost sales and keep margins elevated allowing managements to both invest for growth and return cash to shareholders via buybacks and dividends.
But instead of plowing those profits back into new investments, a lot of companies have chosen to give cash to their shareholders via buybacks or dividends.
Rich Uncles» REIT investing strategy is to buy commercial real estate with at least 50 % cash down, rent the spaces to reliable companies with long - term leases and pay out the rental income to their REIT shareholders via monthly dividends.
Goldman Sachs in February estimated S&P 500 firms will return $ 1.2 trillion to shareholders via buybacks and dividends in 2018, increasing share buybacks by 23 percent to $ 650 billion this year.
Cash on balance sheets remains three - to - five times higher than other developed market peers, and corporate governance reforms are encouraging delivery of excess capital to shareholders via share buybacks, dividends and acquisitions.
After paying such taxes, the remainder amount should boost earnings per share and these moneys can be either reinvested into the company or distributed to U.S. shareholders via cash dividends or share buy - backs.
In addition to dividends, SNA has returned capital to shareholders via share repurchases.
If the DRP is recommenced in the future, the ASX will be notified via an announcement lodged with the ASX Market Announcements Platform and shareholders who have elected to participate in the DRP will have the dividends on some or all of their shares automatically reinvested in additional shares.
Look for the large companies that earn good profits and distribute a major portion of their profits via dividends to their shareholders.
Tax policy can also influence how companies choose to return cash to shareholders — if dividends are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains, this creates incentives to return cash via buybacks and debt reduction.
And great businesses very often directly reward their shareholders with a portion of the growing profit great businesses generate, which is executed via growing dividend payments.
Ultimately, we expect Education Loan Management to return more capital to shareholders via share buybacks and dividends after the spinoff is completed.
Indeed, Omnicom typically returns (via a combination of dividends and share repurchases) ~ 100 % of its net income back to shareholders, every year.
It seems these companies are able to return cash to shareholders (via dividend raises) on average in the 8 - 12 % range without share buybacks and in 11 - 15 % range with (total shareholder yield) outside of any additional increase in the actual price per share.
Shareholders are participating via rising dividends, and since insurance companies oftentimes trade based on their book value, share prices are rising as well.
Otherwise, free cash flow should be returned to shareholders via the other three uses: dividends, share buybacks and debt repayments.
-- Determine the most efficient return of the balance of the commitment to shareholdersvia regular share buybacks, a return of capital, or perhaps a special dividend.
Effectively all of this is paid to shareholders — 1.6 % being the dividend yield and the rest via ongoing share buybacks.
And then I, as a shareholder, then later collect a portion of that check via the dividend.
This launches a new growth phase that's long been anticipated by investors — actually, they can have their cake & eat it here, as management also committed to returning up to EUR 1 billion to shareholders (via buybacks & special dividends) over the next 2 years.
Time for a step - change... Overall, it's a pretty stable core business, so management needs to start milking it for cash to return to shareholders (via dividends / buy - backs), or else accelerate growth by ramping up its leverage & acquisition pipeline / spending (more acquisitions, bigger acquisitions, or both...)-- at this point, I'd still prefer a bet on the latter.
It offers shareholders to either (1) take $ 3.00 per share in cash or (2) $ 2.62 in cash (via a special dividend) and an equity stub, thus giving shareholders the ability to participate in future upside.
And those rising rent checks are essentially passed down to the shareholders via regular and growing dividends.
Better yet, Lockheed's management has proven to be one of the most shareholder - friendly teams in the industry, with the company returning 100 % of free cash flow (cash left over after running the business and investing in its growth) via buybacks and dividends in 2016.
Assurant returned $ 995 million to shareholders in 2016 via dividends and share repurchases.
-- If you still insist on interpreting a company's prospects via the prism of its dividend, you just might be misleading yourself, or you've been forced into it by a management who can't / won't communicate clearly with you, the shareholder.
The thing is that as a shareholder, I prefer either to get some of the cash distributed back to me, may be via a special dividend or share - buybacks, or I prefer the cash to be spent on projects that might multiply in value.
A cash cow is of no use for the owners / shareholders if most of the money is not given to them via dividends but invested — rather wasted — in futile projects.
I would buy high - quality stocks that had lengthy track records of returning a portion of their profit to shareholders via increasing dividends — and I would only buy these stocks when they were attractively valued.
in terms of return, ICO is just a promise of increased value in future via tokens, while IPOs offer dividends to their shareholders.
I would buy high - quality stocks that had lengthy track records of returning a portion of their profit to shareholders via increasing dividends — and I would only buy these stocks when they were attractively valued.
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