In: Finance
National Business Machine Co. (NBM) has $4.4 million of extra
cash after taxes have been paid....
National Business Machine Co. (NBM) has $4.4 million of extra
cash after taxes have been paid. NBM has two choices to make use of
this cash. One alternative is to invest the cash in financial
assets. The resulting investment income will be paid out as a
special dividend at the end of three years. In this case, the firm
can invest in Treasury bills yielding 2.2 percent or a 4.6 percent
preferred stock. IRS regulations allow the company to exclude from
taxable income 50 percent of the dividends received from investing
in another company’s stock. Another alternative is to pay out the
cash now as dividends. This would allow the shareholders to invest
on their own in Treasury bills with the same yield, or in preferred
stock. The corporate tax rate is 24 percent. Assume the investor
has a 38 percent personal income tax rate, which is applied to
interest income and preferred stock dividends. The personal
dividend tax rate is 10 percent on common stock dividends. Suppose
the company reinvests the $4.4 million and pays a dividend in three
years. What is the total aftertax cash flow to shareholders if the
company invests in T-bills?
What is the total aftertax cash flow to shareholders if the
company invests in preferred stock?
Suppose instead that the company pays a $4.4 million dividend
now and the shareholder reinvests the dividend for three years.
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What is the total aftertax cash flow to shareholders if the
shareholder invests in T-bills? (Do not round intermediate
calculations and enter you answer in dollars, not millions, rounded
to 2 decimal places, e.g., 1,234,567.89.)
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What is the total aftertax cash flow to shareholders if the
shareholder invests in preferred stock? (Do not round
intermediate calculations and enter you answer in dollars, not
millions, rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g.,
1,234,567.89.)
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