Sam Hartzmark will be the most educated individual on irrational investor conduct associated to dividends. Final week, he joined me on the podcast to stroll via a few of his analysis. We cowl some enjoyable subjects:
- Juicing – Mutual funds buy shares earlier than dividend funds to artificially enhance their dividends
- The Free Dividend Fallacy – Buyers monitoring capital positive aspects and dividends as separate and impartial variables, which is improper.
- Indices Ignoring Dividends – The Dow and S&P 500 are sometimes cited as value indices (ignoring dividends), so traders deal with the value change as the first sign.
You possibly can pay attention on Apple or Spotify, or watch on YouTube, and see all of Sam’s papers within the present notes.
Listed here are 10 dividend stats from Sam’s papers:
- Shares of their “predicted dividend month” earn an irregular return of 1.5% to 2.0% greater than in non-dividend months.
- Cumulative irregular returns (CAR) start to construct roughly 45 days previous to the ex-dividend date, peaking at 1.79% on common.
- Buyers are prepared to pay 15-20% greater expense ratios for a fund marketed as “Revenue” or “Dividend Centered” in comparison with a total-return fund with an identical holdings.
- Some mutual funds buy shares earlier than dividend funds to artificially enhance their dividends.
- Mutual funds that “juice” their yields (Extra Dividend Ratio > 1.38) see 6.8% greater capital inflows per yr. In the event that they juice extra aggressively (Ratio > 2.0), inflows soar to 12.2% per yr.
- On index ex-dividend days, information protection is considerably extra detrimental as a result of reporters mistake the mechanical value drop for a detrimental market occasion.
- Mutual funds that beat the S&P 500 Value Index (the “improper” benchmark for whole return) noticed a further 0.56% influx per thirty days in comparison with funds that matched the index however had the next whole return through dividends.
- Demand for dividends is systematically greater in intervals of low rates of interest and poor market efficiency, resulting in decrease returns for dividend-paying shares.
- In a single survey, 70% of members (together with MBA college students & professionals) failed to grasp {that a} inventory value should drop by the dividend quantity, viewing the fee as a substitute as a “bonus” return.
- Measures of liquidity and demand for dividends are related to bigger value will increase within the interval earlier than the ex-day (when there isn’t any information concerning the dividend), and bigger reversals afterwards.
