Companies with excess cash often employ share repurchase plans in place of or along with cash dividends.
Question:
Companies with excess cash often employ share repurchase plans in place of or along with cash dividends. Share repurchase plans can help investors liquidate their holdings by selling their stock to the issuing company and earning from capital gains.
Consider the case of Sixty-second Avenue Company:
Sixty-second Avenue Company has forecasted a net income of $4,200,000 for this year. Its common stock currently trades at $19 per share, and the company currently has 910,000 shares of common stock outstanding. It has sufficient funds available to pay a cash dividend, but many of its investors don't like the additional tax liability to which the dividend income subjects them.
As a result, Sixty-second Avenue’s management is considering making a share repurchase transaction in which it would buy back 85,000 shares of its outstanding shares in the open market by paying the current market share price. Assume that the repurchase transaction will have no effect on either the company's net income or its price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio. What is Sixty-second Avenue's expected stock price after the stock repurchase transaction? (Note: Round your intermediate calculation to two decimal places. Round your answer to two decimal places.)
$20.92 per share
$23.01 per share
$19.87 per share
$26.15 per share
Which of these factors are considered an advantage of a stock repurchase? Check all that apply.
1 - - Repurchases can be used to produce large-scale changes in capital structure.
2 - - The firm might pay too high a price for the repurchased stock.
3 - - When a firm distributes cash by repurchasing stock, stockholders have the option to either sell or not sell stock.
College Physics Reasoning and Relationships
ISBN: 978-0840058195
2nd edition
Authors: Nicholas Giordano