Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
P. Bernstein (2005)
Dividends and the Frozen Orange Juice SyndromeFinancial Analysts Journal, 61
S. Bhattacharya (1979)
Imperfect Information, Dividend Policy, and "The Bird in the Hand" FallacyThe Bell Journal of Economics, 10
Alon Brav, Campbell Harvey, J. Graham, Roni Michaely (2003)
Payout Policy in the 21st CenturyPublic Economics eJournal
G. Popp, H. Davis (1976)
Birth Order and Managerial Achievement: Another LookJournal of Management, 2
Franklin Allen, Antonio Bernardo, I. Welch (1998)
A Theory of Dividends Based on Tax ClientelesJournal of Finance, 55
Merton Miller, Myron Scholes (1982)
Dividends and Taxes: Some Empirical EvidenceJournal of Political Economy, 90
R.A. Olsen
The instinctive mind on Wall Street: evolution and investment decision‐making
R. Pettit (1972)
DIVIDEND ANNOUNCEMENTS, SECURITY PERFORMANCE, AND CAPITAL MARKET EFFICIENCYJournal of Finance, 27
Thomas McCluskey, Bruce Burton, D. Power, C. Sinclair (2006)
Evidence on the Irish stock market's reaction to dividend announcementsApplied Financial Economics, 16
W. Bondt, R. Thaler (1995)
Chapter 13 Financial decision-making in markets and firms: A behavioral perspective
C. Kearney (1997)
The Causes of Volatility in a Small Internationally Integrated Stock Market: Ireland, July 1975 - June 1994ERN: Econometric Modeling in Financial Economics (Topic)
Owain Gwilym, James Seaton, Karina Suddason, Stephen Thomas (2006)
International Evidence on the Payout Ratio, Earnings, Dividends, and ReturnsFinancial Analysts Journal, 62
F. Allen, R. Michaely
Payout policy
G. Frankfurter, Arman Kosedag, Kevin Chiang, D. Collison, D. Power, H. Schmidt, Raymond So, Mihail Topalov (2004)
A comparative analysis of perception of dividends by financial managersResearch in International Business and Finance, 18
M. Statman (1999)
Behaviorial Finance: Past Battles and Future EngagementsFinancial Analysts Journal, 55
Kose John, Joseph Williams (1983)
Dividends, Dilution, and Taxes: A Signalling EquilibriumJournal of Finance, 40
F. Black, Myron Scholes (1974)
The effects of dividend yield and dividend policy on common stock prices and returnsJournal of Financial Economics, 1
H. Shefrin, M. Statman (1984)
Explaining investor preference for cash dividendsJournal of Financial Economics, 13
O. Campbell (2003)
Is Dividend Policy Still Irrelevant?, 6
A. Kalay, Roni Michaely (2000)
Dividends and Taxes: A Re-ExaminationFinancial Management, 29
Richard Wilson, Qing Zhang (1997)
ENTRAPMENT AND ESCALATING COMMITMENT IN INVESTMENT DECISION MAKING: A REVIEW☆British Accounting Review, 29
R. Litzenberger, K. Ramaswamy (1982)
The Effects of Dividends on Common Stock Prices Tax Effects or Information EffectsJournal of Finance, 37
M. Gordon (1959)
Dividends, Earnings, and Stock PricesThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 41
J. Green, D. McAree (2001)
A research note on the information content of dividends and the corroboration effect of earnings and dividend signals: Irish evidenceIrish Journal of Management, 22
G. Frankfurter, Bob Wood (2002)
Dividend policy theories and their empirical testsInternational Review of Financial Analysis, 11
E. Elton, M. Gruber (1970)
Marginal Stockholder Tax Rates and the Clientele EffectThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 52
R. Arnott, Clifford Asness (2003)
Surprise! Higher Dividends = Higher Earnings GrowthFinancial Analysts Journal, 59
S.M. Keane
Dividend policy
Merton Miller (1977)
DEBT AND TAXESJournal of Finance, 32
B.M. Burton, C. Helliar, D.M. Power
A behavioural finance perspective on IPOs and SEOs
Víctor Eguíluz, M. Zimmermann (1999)
Transmission of information and herd Behavior: an application to financial markets.Physical review letters, 85 26 Pt 1
C. Helliar, A. Lonie, D. Power, D. Sinclair (2001)
Attitudes of UK Managers to Risk and Uncertainty
Patrick Hess (1982)
The Ex-Dividend Day Behavior of Stock Returns: Further Evidence on Tax EffectsJournal of Finance, 37
(1984)
Earnings and Dividend Announcements is There a Corroboration Effect
Peter Green, M. Pogue, I. Watson (1993)
Dividend Policy and Its Relationship to Investment and Financing Policies: Empirical Evidence Using Irish Data, 14
Brett Trueman, Ronald Masulis (1988)
Corporate Investment and Dividend Decisions under Differential Personal TaxationJournal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 23
M. Lasfer (1996)
Taxes and dividends: The UK evidenceJournal of Banking and Finance, 20
A. Dhanani (2005)
Corporate Dividend Policy: The Views of British Financial ManagersEuropean Finance
H. DeAngelo, L. DeAngelo (2005)
The Irrelevance of the Mm Dividend Irrelevance TheoremPOL: Accounting View of the Firm (Topic)
J.P. Green, P. McIlkenny
Inter‐temporal dividend models: an empirical analysis using recent Irish data
H. DeAngelo, L. DeAngelo, Douglas Skinner (2002)
Are Dividends Disappearing? Dividend Concentration and the Consolidation of EarningsUSC Marshall School of Business Research Paper Series
Kent Daniel, D. Hirshleifer, A. Subrahmanyam (1998)
Presentation Slides for 'Investor Psychology and Security Market Under and Overreactions'CSN: Business (Topic)
Merton Miller, Kevin Rock (1985)
Dividend Policy under Asymmetric InformationJournal of Finance, 40
G. Arnold (1998)
Corporate Financial Management
R. Litzenberger, K. Ramaswamy (1979)
The effect of personal taxes and dividends on capital asset pricesJournal of Financial Economics, 7
F. Black (1976)
The Dividend Puzzle, 2
Herman Manakyan, Carolyn Carroll (1990)
An Empirical Examination of the Existence of a Signaling Value Function for DividendsJournal of Financial Research, 13
F. Modigliani
Debt, dividend policy, inflation and market valuation
Florencio Silanes, Andrei Shleifer, Robert Vishny (1998)
Agency Problems and Dividend Policies Around the WorldChicago Booth: Fama-Miller Working Paper Series
T. McCluskey, B.M. Burton, D.M. Power
Evidence on Irish company managers' views about dividend policy
Robert Olsen (2000)
The Instinctive Mind on Wall Street, 9
Forfás
Shaping our future – a strategy for Ireland in the 21st century
H. Baker, G. Farrelly, R. Edelman (1985)
A Survey of Management Views on Dividend PolicyFinancial Management, 14
F. Modigliani (1982)
Debt, Dividend Policy, Taxes, Inflation and Market ValuationJournal of Finance, 37
Forfás
Enterprise 2010 – A New Strategy for the Promotion of Enterprise in the 21st Century
Merton Miller, F. Modigliani (1961)
DIVIDEND POLICY, GROWTH, AND THE VALUATION OF SHARESThe Journal of Business, 34
L. Booth, D. Johnston (1984)
The Ex‐Dividend Day Behavior of Canadian Stock Prices: Tax Changes and Clientele EffectsJournal of Finance, 39
S. Keane (1974)
Dividends and the Resolution of UncertaintyJournal of Business Finance & Accounting, 1
K. Daniel, D. Hirshleifer, A. Subrahmanyam
Investor psychology and security market under‐ and overreactions
Merton Miller, Myron Scholes (1978)
Dividends and taxesJournal of Financial Economics, 6
A. Schleifer
Inefficient Markets
J. Stewart (1988)
Corporate Finance and Fiscal Policy in Ireland
W.F.M. DeBondt, R. Thaler
Financial decision making and firms: a behavioural perspective
Ireland Forfás (2000)
Enterprise 2010 - New Strategy for the Promotion of Enterprise in Ireland in the 21st Century
E. Fama, Harvey Babiak (1968)
Dividend Policy: An Empirical AnalysisJournal of the American Statistical Association, 63
J. Lintner (1956)
DISTRIBUTION OF INCOMES OF CORPORATIONS AMONG DIVIDENDS, RETAINED EARNINGS AND TAXES, 46
NESC
Strategy for the twenty‐first century
A. Lonie, G. Abeyratna, D. Power, C. Sinclair (1996)
The stock market reaction to dividend announcements: A UK study of complex market signalsJournal of Economic Studies, 23
H. Manakyan, C. Carroll
An empirical examination of a signalling value function for dividends
P. Asquith, D. Mullins (1983)
The Impact of Initiating Dividend Payments on Shareholders' WealthThe Journal of Business, 56
T. Barrett, D. Cotter
The dividend strategy of Irish manufacturing companies
Ireland Forfás (1996)
Shaping our Future - A Strategy for Enterprise in Ireland in the 21st Century
E.F. Fama, K.R. French
Disappearing dividends: changing firm characteristics or lower propensity to pay?
Purpose – This study aims to provide a modern perspective on the role of dividends in smaller developed countries such as Ireland by examining views regarding the determinants of payout levels, the role of taxation and the relevance of conventional signalling theory. Design/methodology/approach – The study employs semi‐structured interviews with the financial directors of 20 leading Irish companies. Findings – The results suggest support for the notion that dividend policy affects share valuations. However, views regarding this issue – and the role of taxation and signalling theory – vary markedly between quoted and unquoted firms as well as depending on firms' dividend histories. Research limitations/implications – The study suffers from the problem that in interview‐based research the participants are necessarily a self‐selecting group. Notwithstanding this point, the evidence suggests that the views of managers in a nation with a small, but highly developed, stock market are in line with those in countries with much larger exchanges. Further research could usefully extend the analysis and establish whether similar views exist in other countries with relatively small stock markets, but where the exchange is in an “emerging” rather than “developed” state. Originality/value – The contribution of the paper comes from the uniqueness of the Irish setting: the Irish market is relatively small but, unlike many similarly sized markets, it is highly‐developed, with long‐term historical links to the London Stock Exchange. The results, therefore, provide evidence about the extent to which earlier findings based on the world's largest developed markets also prevail in those that are more modestly sized.
Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management – Emerald Publishing
Published: Jun 12, 2007
Keywords: Dividends; Interviews; Taxation; Ireland
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.