INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT‚ INDORE Finance 2 Case Analysis Gainesboro Machine Tool Corporation Course Instructor: Prof A Kanagraj Submitted By: Amol Vyawahare Roll Number: 2008PGP021B Gainesboro Machine Tool Corporation Background Reading: Once a company makes a profit‚ they must decide on what to do with those profits. They could continue to retain the profits within the company‚ or they could pay out the profits to the owners of the firm in the form of dividends. Once the
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Executive Summary Gainesboro Corporation was a company who designed and manufactured a number of machinery parts‚ including metal presses‚ dies‚ and molds. The company was found in 1923 in Concord‚ New Hampshire‚ by two mechanical engineers‚ James Gaines and David Scarboro. The two men had gone to school together and were disenchanted with their prospects as mechanics at a farm equipment manufacturer. In the 1940’s Gainesboro produced armored-vehicle and tank parts and miscellaneous equipment
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How might various providers of capital (shareholders and creditors) react if Gainesboro repurchased its shares? Should Gainesboro do so? Repurchasing shares or share buyback: – Open market repurchases (buy over time as other investors) – Tender offer (buy shares at a precise date) – Targeted repurchase (buy from major shareholder There are ways for shareholders to receive cash without being paid dividends. A firm can buy back some of its shares with the advantage being that most investors
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Gainesboro Machine Tools Corporation Teaching Note Synopsis and Objectives In mid September 2005‚ Ashley Swenson‚ the chief financial officer (CFO) of a large computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) equipment manufacturer needed to decide whether to pay out dividends to the firm’s shareholders‚ or to repurchase stock. If Swenson chose to pay out dividends‚ she would have to also decide upon the magnitude of the payout. A subsidiary question is whether the firm should
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Introduction – Company background Dividend payment decisions Policy analysis ◦ Zero dividend payout – pros and cons ◦ 40% or $0.2 per share – pros and cons ◦ Residual-dividend payout – pros and cons Conclusion Founded in 1923 In early days‚ it has designed and manufactured a number of machinery parts‚ including metal presses‚ dies and molds. By 1975‚ it has evolved as innovative producer of industrial machinery and machine tools. In 1980‚ entered in CAD/CAM and established
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Journal of Banking & Finance 27 (2003) 1297–1321 www.elsevier.com/locate/econbase Corporate governance‚ dividend payout policy‚ and the interrelation between dividends‚ R&D‚ and capital investment Klaus Gugler * Department of Economics‚ University of Vienna‚ WP No. 9803‚ Br€nnerstrasse 72‚ 1210 Vienna‚ Austria u Received 12 October 2000; accepted 5 November 2001 Abstract This paper investigates the relationship between dividends and the ownership and control structure of the firm
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CHAPTER 17: PAYOUT POLICY Chapter 17 Learning Objectives 1. Describe how dividends are paid out and how corporations decide how much to pay. 2. Explain how stock repurchases are used to distribute cash to investors. 3. Explain why dividend increases and repurchases are good news for investors and why dividend cuts are bad news. 4. Explain why payout policy would not affect shareholder value in perfect and efficient financial markets. 5. Show how market imperfections‚ especially the different
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RNSG 1413 – FOUNDATIONS OF NURSING PRACTICE EXAM 4 – BLUEPRINT Spring 2013 55 Total Questions: Exam #4 – 21‚ 22‚ 25‚ 32‚ 40‚ 43‚ respiratory/cardiovascular assessment Chapter 21 Managing Patient Care (5 questions) The delivery of nursing care within the health care system is a challenge because of the changes that are influencing health professionals‚ patients‚ and health care organizations. Change offers opportunities. Students need to develop knowledge and skills to manage patients
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destiny or our scrolls of judgment. For example‚ Psalm 40:6-8 [The Voice]‚ reads; Sacrifices and offerings are not what You want‚ but You’ve opened my ears‚ and now I understand. Burnt offerings and sin offerings are not what please You. So I said‚ “See‚ I have come to do Your will‚ as it is inscribed of me in the scroll. I am pleased to live how You want‚ my God. Your law is etched into my heart and my soul.” If we go to the beginning of Psalm 40‚ we see King David starting
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Issue 15 (2008) © EuroJournals Publishing‚ Inc. 2008 http://www.eurojournals.com/finance.htm Determinants of Dividend Payout Ratios-A Study of Indian Information Technology Sector Kanwal Anil Jaypee Business School‚ Noida‚ India Sujata Kapoor Institute of Management Studies‚ Ghaziabad‚ India Abstract Profitability has always been considered as a primary indicator of dividend payout ratio. There are numerous other factors other than profitability also that affect dividend decisions of an organization
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