Dividend Per Share - DPS

  

Categories: Stocks, Accounting, Metrics

See: Dividend.

Whatever.com commits to paying $40 million in dividends this year on a quarterly basis. The company has 50 million shares outstanding. Each shareholder of record of common stock will receive the dividend in the company's declaration. That is, the $40 million will be split equally among each of the 50 million slices of pie of whatever.com, meaning that $40 divided by 50 million will be the dollar amount of dividends paid per share of stock.

So in this case, that's 80 cents a share in dividends paid quarterly in the form of a 20 cent per share dividend each quarter. Fancy pants math.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is the Dividend Discount M...2 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is the dividend discount model Well

00:07

it's a technique used to value companies or at least

00:11

it wass in the stone age And yet in the

00:14

nineteen fifties maybe which basically says that a company's value

00:17

is fully contained in the cash dividends it distributes back

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to invest doors This model is only useful really for

00:25

its historical relevance We we just don't use that much

00:28

these days Yeah back in the old timey cave man

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days when there was essentially no research of real merit

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being done on the performance of investments of whatever flavor

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the dividend discount model was the best thing investors had

00:40

to value an investment in a company And remember in

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those days companies paid rial dividends that were a meaningful

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percentage of the total value of the company Unless so

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a company pays a dollar a share this year in

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dividends Historically it's raised dividends at about three percent a

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year like paid a dollar last you'd expect two dollars

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three next year in dollars six and change the next

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so well The dividend discount model discounts backto present value

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And yes we have an opus on what president value

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Means but here's the logline definition present value of all

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future cash flows discounted for risk in time Back to

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cars Yeah that thing well a few odd things are

01:18

worth noting in this horse and buggy era formula The

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dividend discount model ignores the terminal or end value of

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the company Like say twenty years from now the company

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is sold for cash The dividends are all that are

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really focused on though in our model that seem strange

01:34

to you Well maybe But let's say the discount rate

01:37

is ten percent in the risk free rate is four

01:40

percent for a total of fourteen percent a year discounted

01:43

back to the present So doing the math just looking

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at the terminal value of say a hundred million bucks

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in a sale to be made twenty years from now

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Let's figure out what that's worth today Well you take

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the one point one four Put it to the twentieth

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power to reflect twenty years of discounted valuation compounding And

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you say one point one four forty twenty powers about

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thirteen point seven So to get the present value of

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one hundred million bucks twenty years from now using this

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discount rate Will you divide the hundred million by thirteen

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point seven and that means that the one hundred million

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dollars twenty years from now today is worth only seven

02:16

point three million bucks And yeah that's ah big haircut

02:20

kind of like this guy Well the formula focuses ah

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lot on near term dividend distribution and it's Really more

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interesting is a relic of original financial research in theory

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than anything directly useful today And if you find this

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interesting while then we may have a gig for you

02:36

here at shmoop finance central Yeah come on down We 00:02:39.715 --> [endTime] need writers good ones not like me

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