Business Standard

India Inc holds back on dividends

- KRISHNA KANT Mumbai, 4 May

The 2016-17 dividend season has started on a poor note for shareholde­rs, with payout to them growing at the slowest pace in three years.

The combined dividend payout by 250 earlybird companies was up only one per cent for 201617, down from 2.8 per cent growth in FY16 and a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19.8 per cent.

Among the companies on this list are some of corporate India’s biggest dividend payers. They're either paying less dividend for FY17 or have decided to keep it at the same levels as a year before (see chart).

For example, informatio­n technology (IT) major Wipro’s dividend payout is down two-thirds to ~486 crore for FY17, from ~1,482 crore a year before. ICICI Bank is paying 50 per cent less dividend for FY17 as it battles rising non-performing loans and stagnant profits. Other big dividend payers such as Indiabulls Housing Finance and Marico also cut payout for FY17, while cement major ACC did not announce any dividend at all for calendar year 2016.

The analysis is based on the 250 companies which have announced or paid interim and final dividend for 2016-17. The figures exclude dividend distributi­on tax paid on the amount by the company.

Among top dividend payers (in absolute terms), Hindustan Zinc, Axis Bank, and Dabur India are not raising their dividends.

At Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS), Reliance Industries and Infosys, it’s up in low single digits.

Poorer dividend payout is, however, not due to profitabil­ity concerns. The combined net profit of the sample was up 10.8 per cent for FY17, marginally down from the 11.1 per cent year-on-year growth reported for FY16. On average, companies are distributi­ng 28.5 per cent of their net profit as equity dividend for FY17, down from 31.3 per cent the previous year and 34 per cent for FY15.

As a result, retained profits grew 15 per cent for FY17 in the sample, the fastest pace in five years. Top companies in cashrich sectors such as IT services cut back as they plan to return a large part of their surplus cash to shareholde­rs in the form of share buyback, which doesn’t attract dividend distributi­on tax and additional dividend tax, which is a 10 per cent tax on dividend income over ~10 lakh a year for shareholde­rs.

In FY17, listed companies cumulative­ly announced buybacks worth around ~60,000 crore equivalent, to around 40 per cent of all dividend paid by listed companies in FY16.

"Equity dividend attracts dividend distributi­on tax first in the hands of companies and then the additional dividend tax in the hands of shareholde­rs if their annual dividend income exceeds the threshold. This is pinching promoters and high net worth individual­s, who are pushing their companies to use the buyback rather than dividend route to reward shareholde­rs,” says G Chokkaling­am, chief executive at Equinomics Research & Advisory.

Early this year, TCS announced a share buyback worth ~16,000 crore. It was followed by Wipro and HCL Technologi­es, which planned to return ~2,500 crore and ~3,500 crore, respective­ly, to shareholde­rs via this route.

In aggregate amount, central public sector companies (Coal India, NMDC, Bharat Electronic­s, Oil India, MOIL, NLC India) have the biggest share buyback programme, which largely benefits their promoter shareholde­r – the Government of India. Analysts the buyback goes against the interest of retail (meaning, individual and nonwealthy) investors (annual dividend income of less than ~10 lakh). “Many retail investors buy and hold shares of cash-rich companies to earn a steady stream of dividends. Share buyback hurts them, as they would now have to first surrender their shares and then buy these again. Many will not like this constant churn,” adds Chokkaling­am.

Among early birds, Hindustan Zinc is the largest dividend payer, with total payout of ~11,620 crore to its shareholde­rs for 201617. Followed by TCS (~ 9,261 crore) Infosys (~5,892 crore) and Reliance Industries (3,255 crore). Maruti Suzuki was among the few companies to buck the trend. It more than doubled the FY17 payout to ~2,265 crore, from ~1,057 crore a year before. Other companies to announce doubledigi­t hikes included HDFC Bank, Nestle India, Castrol, Siemens, Ambuja Cement, YES Bank and UPL. In all, the companies in our sample cumulative­ly plan to pay ~51,018 crore worth of dividend for FY17, against ~50,535 crore a year before.

In comparison, all listed companies together paid around ~1.56 lakh crore worth of equity dividend in FY16. Some of the big dividend payers missing in the early-bird sample include Coal India (FY16 topper), Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n, ITC, NMDC, Hindustan Unilever and Indian Oil.

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