Increase in Dividend Payout Ratio in a Maturing Industry

Dividend Payout Ratio and Industry Maturity

Prev Question Next Question

Question

If the dividend payout ratio for a stock market series is anticipated to increase as the industry advances towards relative maturity, which of the following would occur assuming that both k and g remain constant? Further, what would occur if the growth rate of dividends were to exceed the required rate of return?

Answers

Explanations

Click on the arrows to vote for the correct answer

A. B. C. D. E.

E

Remember that the equation used to determine the appropriate earnings multiplier for a stock market series is the following:

{P/E = [D/E / (k - g)]}

Where: P/E = the earnings multiplier, or Price-to-Earnings ratio, D/E = the dividend payout ratio at t1, k = the required rate of return, and g = the anticipated growth rate of dividends.

According to this equation, an increase in the dividend payout ratio will lead to an increase in the earnings multiplier, assuming that both the required rate of return and the anticipated growth rate remain unchanged. In reality, this assumption is nonsensical in this case. Specifically, the dividend payout ratio is anticipated to increase because the industry is becoming more mature. In other words, companies comprising the series are expected to pay out more of their earnings as dividends due to diminishing positive NPV investment opportunities. By definition this would decrease the anticipated growth rate, which would in turn lead to a decline in the earnings multiplier.

If the anticipated growth rate were to exceed the required rate of return, the resulting earnings multiplier would be a negative number, a result that doesn't make sense.