Abstract: We examine the effects of the 2003 dividend tax cut on U.S. stock prices and
corporate payout policies. First, using an event-study methodology, we compare
the performance of U.S. stocks to that of other securities that should not have
benefited from the tax change. We find that U.S. large-cap and small-cap indexes
do not outperform their European counterparts, nor REIT stocks, over the event
windows, suggesting little if any aggregate stock market effect from the tax
change. In cross-sectional analysis, high-dividend stocks outperformed low-dividend
stocks by a few percentage points over the event windows. On the other hand,
non-dividend paying stocks are found to have outperformed the overall market by a
small margin, but this result does not appear specific to the event windows, suggesting
that non-tax factors were at play. Second, the tax change did appear to induce an
increase in dividends, especially at firms where executive compensation was weighted
more heavily toward stock than options. However, the effect on total payouts was more
muted, as many firms scaled back share repurchases.
Keywords: Dividends, capital taxation, share repurchases, executive compensation
Full paper (166 KB PDF)
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Last update: December 12, 2005
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