Submitted by lilly_kilgore t3_10phz45 in explainlikeimfive
omicrom35 t1_j6ku66c wrote
Reply to comment by ThenaCykez in ELI5: What does it mean when a company buys back stocks and why is it frowned upon? by lilly_kilgore
Correct me if I am wrong but companies have to actively approve dividends each year?
tdscanuck t1_j6kugm2 wrote
Usually the company proposes dividends and their board of directors approves it. From a purely process standpoint, most companies can turn dividends on or off at will (details depend on their exact corporate rules). In practice, investors generally expect dividends to be pretty even over long periods so companies don't like to mess with dividends...once you start doing them, or increase them, it's really hard to stop without a significant stock price hit.
DTux5249 t1_j6kybd1 wrote
Put simply: Correct, in a vacuum where shareholders were bricks with wallets that don't care about getting paid
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments