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Suppose you know that a company’s stock currently sells for $56 per share and the required return on the stock is 10 percent. You also know that the total return on the stock is evenly divided between a capital gains yield and a dividend yield. If it’s the company’s policy to always maintain a constant growth rate in its dividends, what is the current dividend per share? (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)

User RafaelKr
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Answer:

Current dividend per share =$2.67

Step-by-step explanation:


Total Return = Div yield + Capital gain yield = 10%\\

But from the question


Dividend yield = Capital gains yield

therefore
Dividend yield =(0.1)/(2) = 0.05


Dividend yield = (D1)/(P0)

therefore:
D1=P0*Dividend yield = 56*0.05=$2.80\\

the question however is not asking for D1 but D0.

and
D1= D0(1+g)


g=ke-(D1)/(P0) = 0.1 - \frac/{2.8}{56} = 0.05

therefore
D0=(2.8)/(1.05) = $2.67

User William Payne
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