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Finance: What is an Accumulated Dividend? 9 Views
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What is an Accumulated Dividend? Accumulated dividends are dividends paid on cumulative preferred stock. They are referred to as accumulated because they are a combination of previous and current dividends, none of which have been paid to the shareholder yet.
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Transcript
- 00:00
finance a la shmoop what is an accumulated dividend okay you know what
- 00:08
a dividend is companies generally commit to paying it when they have so much [Example of dividend meaning on a 100 dollar bill]
- 00:13
extra cash profit that they really don't know what to do with the dough yeah nice
- 00:17
place to be in the case of a preferred stock the dividends aren't just a
- 00:22
optional-ish they operate more like bond interest only with a catch
Full Transcript
- 00:27
that is dividends on preferred stock can in fact be halted without the company
- 00:32
being repossessed by the debt holders like in the case where the company falls [Prize wheel lands on hard times]
- 00:36
on hard times or it wants to preserve its cash to buy a competitor or it just
- 00:41
wants another jet with a water slide thing on it well yeah it can halt its [Person slides down a jet slide]
- 00:46
dividend in those cases and well there are two types of preferred stock in this
- 00:50
realm the ones that pay cumulative dividends and the ones that don't
- 00:54
cleverly named non-cumulative say a company has halted dividends from its
- 01:00
preferred for three and a half years and it was paying five bucks a quarter in [Dividend distribution graph]
- 01:05
dividends from those cumulative preferred well if it was to resume
- 01:09
paying dividends on them it would first have to pay all back fourteen quarters
- 01:15
worth of dividends before it began to issue more dividends or pay them to its
- 01:20
preferred holders that is it owed three years times four quarters or twelve
- 01:26
quarters plus half a year or two quarters for a total of fourteen
- 01:29
quarters at five bucks a quarter a share that's five times fourteen or seventy [Formula of non-cumulative dividends]
- 01:33
dollars a share in back cumulative dividends big obligation but it has to
- 01:38
pay that amount before it can resume dividend payments why would a company
- 01:42
have a cumulative feature in its preferred dividend obligation well
- 01:46
because investors forced it to do so or they wouldn't invest they were worried [Person swipes away stacks of money]
- 01:50
that the preferred dividends might be just some merrily stopped and then the
- 01:54
investors would have little or no return on their investment in the preferred and
- 01:58
this can be a problem for companies that have fallen on hard times they are
- 02:02
essentially made illiquid in that they can't afford to pay the back dividends [Example of illiquid meaning]
- 02:06
on the preferreds and they can't raise more capital with this blight on their
- 02:10
record of having stopped paying a divvy well most [Non cumulative stock stickers appear on a table]
- 02:13
furred stocks are non-cumulative and if companies decide to just stop paying
- 02:18
them they can but if they do it's kind of like they've reneged on a handshake [Two guys giving a handshake]
- 02:23
and you know investors talk so like good luck to the company ever trying to raise
- 02:28
capital again from the cold cruel outside world yeah welcome to Wall
- 02:33
Street [Wall Street road sign]
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