Investing
The premise of Modigliani and Miller, that dividend policy is basically irrelevant in that if a firm is growing then an internal dividend is created and the investor may sell shares to capture this dividend, is based on the idea that in today's market fundamentals matter. They do not. Today's market is driven by central bank policy. Quantitative Easing (QE) has so altered the market and eradicated true price discovery that a simple comparison of charts -- one of a global economy that is collapsing and one of a U.S. stock market at all-time highs -- is enough to persuade any rational person that an examination of central bank balance sheets is warranted. Such an examination would uncover trillions in exposure. The Bank of Japan for instance was a top 10 holder of 90% of the Nikkei in April and has only increased its stake since then (Durden). The ECB is following suit: it began buying government bonds, then corporate bonds, and soon it may be buying stocks directly -- the final prop before Ben Bernanke's "helicopter money" is dropped in order to "save" the markets.
Dividend policy is not irrelevant -- but central banks...
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