In this study, we examine the extent of dividend heaping in Australian firms between 1976 and 2015. Our findings show that 27.39% of dividends greater than or equal to 2.5-cents are heaped in 2.5-cent intervals, while 70.90% of dividends less than 2.5-cents are heaped in 0.25-cent intervals. We find that the heaping phenomenon decreases over time and average dividend size increases. We also show that when establishing the likelihood of dividend heaping, stock return volatility and firm size are consistent with the information uncertainty hypothesis. Dividend heaping also appears to be influenced by firm-level characteristics that are inconsistent with the hypothesis. For instance, the likelihood of heaping increases with dividend size and firm age.
Journal article
Do corporate directors 'heap' dividends? Evidence on dividend rounding and information uncertainty in Australian firms
Australian Journal of Management, Vol.43(3), pp.421-438
2018
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Do corporate directors 'heap' dividends? Evidence on dividend rounding and information uncertainty in Australian firms
- Creators
- Yoonsoo Nam (Author) - Washington State UniversityScott J Niblock (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityElisabeth Sinnewe (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityKeith Jakob (Author) - University of Montana
- Publication Details
- Australian Journal of Management, Vol.43(3), pp.421-438
- Publisher
- Sage Publications Ltd.
- Identifiers
- 1935; 991012821297902368
- Academic Unit
- School of Business and Tourism; Management; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article