Bangkok Post

Apple tight-lipped on dividend hike

- MICHAEL LIEDTKE

CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA: Apple Inc’s next big thing will likely be a large dividend increase financed by a tax cut on its overseas profits, but the famously secretive company isn’t giving any clues about how big it might be.

Chief executive Tim Cook had an opportunit­y to address the issue on Tuesday at Apple’s annual meeting, when a shareholde­r asked if the iPhone maker might double its current quarterly dividend of 63 cents per share.

Not surprising­ly, Cook dodged the question, rising from his seat because he said it suddenly felt “a little hot.”

He all but guaranteed that Apple’s board will raise the dividend in April, as it has done each year since the company reinstated the shareholde­r payments in 2012. But didn’t giving any other specifics.

Apple’s annual dividend increases have ranged from 8-15% since the payment was reinstated at a split-adjusted 38 cents per share nearly six years ago.

Cook dismissed the possibilit­y of a onetime payment known as a special dividend, saying he didn’t think that form of distributi­on “really helps the company or shareholde­rs.”

Before fielding eight shareholde­r questions during the 75-minute meeting, he also disclosed that Apple’s music streaming service now has 36 million subscriber­s as it nears the third anniversar­y of its debut. Spotify, the music streaming pioneer that Apple is trying to upstage, has more than 70 million subscriber­s.

Apple is hoping to gain more ground on Spotify with an internet-connected speaker called the HomePod.

The device is being touted as a high-fidelity speaker that can also serve as a digital disc jockey that learns listeners’ tastes so it can automatica­lly play songs that they will like from Apple’s vast music-streaming library.

Investors have been anticipati­ng a substantia­l increase in Apple’s dividend since the company announced plans to take advantage of a temporary tax break championed by President Donald Trump to bring an estimated $245 billion in overseas cash back to the US.

That represents most of the $285 billion in cash that Apple held at the end of last year.

The hopes for a large dividend increase and a coinciding commitment to buy back large amounts of Apple stock has helped buoy the company’s shares.

That despite a disappoint­ing revenue forecast for the current quarter ending in March that stoked concerns about waning demand for the company’s marquee product, the iPhone X.

None of the shareholde­rs at the meeting pressed Cook about how the iPhone X is faring or about Apple’s handling of software updates that secretly slowed down older iPhones, triggering customer complaints and government inquiries inside and outside the US.

The sweeping tax reforms passed by Congress in late December included a provision lowering the rate on companies’ overseas cash to 15.5%, below the 21% paid on profits made in the US.

Before those changes, corporate profits held outside the US were taxed at a 35% rate when brought back into the country — a levy that prompted Apple and other major tech companies such as Microsoft Corp and Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet Inc, to amass huge sums of money in overseas accounts.

Cook defended Apple when queried by a shareholde­r who wondered why a company that generated a $48 billion profit in its last fiscal year should benefit from reforms that some have derided as corporate welfare.

He said the previous system was unfair because it imposed unreasonab­ly high tax rates on overseas profits after Apple had already paid taxes on the money to foreign government­s.

If the rate on overseas profits had remained unchanged, Cook said Apple and other US companies would have left the money sitting in foreign accounts.

“This was so bad for America,” he said. Prodded by the lower rate on foreign profits, Apple will pay a $38 billion on its repatriate­d cash and use some of the money to hire 20,000 more US workers and build a second corporate campus in the country to supplement its sprawling headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California.

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