Growth Policy

We're for it. Grow. That's our policy here at Shmoop. Unfortunately, the memo didn't specifically rule out waistlines so...bad things happened.

In fact, growth policy is a thing. Companies make conscious decisions re: whether to reinvest their "excess" cash into growth, buying competitors and/or opening new markets...or to pay a fatter dividend. That's growth policy.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is the Math of Dividend Re...2 Views

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and finance Allah shmoop What is the math of dividend

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reinvestment All right people While some stocks pay dividends you

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know a bit of cash and investors get for holding

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the stock It's little incentive Teo you know keep holding

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onto the shares You could take that cash into whatever

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you want with it but you can also reinvest it

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which means buying mawr of the stock you already own

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So the concept may seem boring but it's good way

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to increase your stock holdings And it's like your shares

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or having little baby shares all without you putting MOHR

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of your own money into the process We'LL stock prices

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move around a lot and as such the math behind

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dividend reinvestment can get complex ish or well sometimes just

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plain ugly So let's do a problem here You buy

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thousand shares of Alpaca Corp and Alternative milk provider right

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They provide milk from alpacas of course but also lamas

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goats and yaks Well here's the stock performance over the

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two years or eight quarters that you held the stock

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A quarter is a three month period by the way

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At the end of the first quarter the stock was

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at one o two fifty then at the end of

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Que Tu shares have risen a one o five and

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stock kept going up in Q three reaching one of

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seven five by the end of period Still climbing in

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queue for alpaca reached one ten by the end of

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that year Right next year Same basic story of stock

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reach one twenty share after the end of the second

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year and that's its performance The stock continue to pay

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its fifty cent per share each quarter in Dividend Doe

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It held the dividend steady for the full two years

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so each quarter the company's sends you cash of fifty

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cents per share for each of your thousand shares are

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five hundred bucks each quarter You can choose to reinvest

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that dividend each quarter The amount of stock that those

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dividend repurchase sings by with that five hundred box Well

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it depends on the stock price of time Right when

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you got the first dividend payment while shares were at

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one o two fifty five hundred divided by one or

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two fifty share and that's about four point eight shares

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So after this dividend reinvestment you have one thousand four

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point eight ish shares And yes you can have point

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eight of a share or something That's how the world

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works OK under the second quarter you get another fifty

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cent dividend per share in the stocks out one o

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five Well remember you no longer have a thousand shares

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You have a thousand four point eight shares because of

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that dividend reinvestment thing in the first quarter So this

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time around you get five hundred two dollars forty ish

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sense in dividends Reinvest those dividends and while you get

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another approximately four point eight shares something like that may

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be a little more The process continues As long as

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you keep the dividend reinvestment going you buy shares with

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the dividends giving you Mohr shares which then increases your

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dividend which gives you more money to buy more shares

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Well the main complicating factor in this calculation is that

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the price of the stock keeps moving It makes it

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difficult to have a clear formula for how many shares

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you get for some set amount of dividend payment right

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You have to just do the math a quarter at

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a time So what's the advantage to all this But

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why reinvest instead of just taking cash simplifying our example

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of it You're getting about five shares a quarter for

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eight quarters in reinvesting your dividends So at the end

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of two years you have forty more shares of alpaca

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instead of having kept the cash dividend on your own

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But say you just kept the cash well on a

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thousand shares at fifty cents a share each quarter over

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eight quarters That's four grand Also you still have the

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thousand shares of stock that you owned originally now worth

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one hundred twenty bucks each or one hundred twenty grand

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Add in the four in dividends and you've got one

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hundred twenty four grand See how that works That's the

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map But here with dividend reinvestment and ignoring all kinds

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of taxes and commissions and other you know realistic noise

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well you'd have a thousand forty shares at one hundred

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twenty dollars each for a total value of one hundred

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twenty four thousand eight hundred bucks and change You'd have

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made another eight hundred ish dollars by reinvesting your dividend

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and this presumes that you spent all of the cash

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dividends out to you when you didn't buy back shares

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Ravan reinvesting that cash somewhere you know useful So why

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does all this matter Well the S and P five

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hundred pays about a two percent dividend in the modern

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era Maybe three That is The median company pays about

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that amount The SNP is Justin Index It rolls up

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each of those five hundred companies into a single tracking

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device Some pay a lot Maurin Dividend wanting some pay

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a lot less some pain Nothing Hi Google Hi Amazon

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Hi Facebook We're looking at you non dividend payers anyway

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Since markets go up over time dividend reinvestment has made

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relative returns better for those buying Mohr shares with their

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dividends However it usually takes a long time for those

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differences to really show up in total value or returns

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And all of this is dependent on stock's going up

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which doesn't always happen tends to happen in the long

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run But in short first well who knows also tends

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to work on an average here Yes and P five

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hundred tends to trend upward over the long haul meaning

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that out of five hundred major companies you can expect

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the median one to show stock gains of about eight

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nine ten percent year over time But in that group

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while some stocks go down some go away Well if

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you're a dividend reinvesting in one stock you return then

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depends on what that one stock did Alpaca is going

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up now because fru fru types like to stock their

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fridges with yak milk But what if Yu Lan musk

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develops a cheap lab created chemical alternative Teo yak milk

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You know the bottom line dropout of alpaca dot com

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And then you might wish you'd taken the cash and

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not reinvested dividends Yakety yak as they say or you 00:05:11.895 --> [endTime] know something like that Ah

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