Bank dividends are bare. Here's why some shareholders hate it more than they should
- Written by Kevin Davis, Professor of Finance, University of Melbourne
In bad news for retirees and others who depend on dividend cheques (and dividend imputation rebate cheques from the Tax Office) bank dividends have largely evaporated. But it’s not as bad as many commentators suggest, and actually good for some investors.
Westpac[1] won’t be paying a dividend this half year. Nor will the ANZ[2], nor the Bank of Queensland[3].
The National Australia Bank[4] will pay one, but only a third the usual size. The Commonwealth Bank’s different reporting dates mean it won’t have to make a decision until August[5].
The Financial Review believes the moves have taken A$9.8 billion[6] in expected dividends and franking credits[7] from bank shareholders to date.
The flip-side missed by many commentators and shareholders is that bank shares are worth more (maybe around $9.8 billion more) than if they had paid those dividends.
References
- ^ Westpac (www.westpac.com.au)
- ^ ANZ (yourir.info)
- ^ Bank of Queensland (wcsecure.weblink.com.au)
- ^ National Australia Bank (www.nab.com.au)
- ^ until August (www.commbank.com.au)
- ^ A$9.8 billion (www.afr.com)
- ^ franking credits (theconversation.com)
- ^ APRA letter to financial institutions, April 7, 2020 (www.apra.gov.au)
- ^ unprecedented letter (www.apra.gov.au)
- ^ dividend policy (www.commbank.com.au)
- ^ fully franked (theconversation.com)
- ^ The last thing companies should be doing right now is paying dividends (theconversation.com)
- ^ Deeming rates explained. What is deeming, how does it cut pensions, and why do we have it? (theconversation.com)
- ^ 43 cents (www.marketindex.com.au)
- ^ half (www.realestate.com.au)
- ^ Here's a radical reform that could keep super and pay every retiree the full pension (theconversation.com)
- ^ rejected (theconversation.com)
Authors: Kevin Davis, Professor of Finance, University of Melbourne