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good news and bad news about share repurchases.pdf

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good news and bad news about share repurchases

Good News and Bad News About Share Repurchases* George W. Fenn Milken Institute, 1250 Fourth St., Santa Monica, CA 90401 Nellie Liang Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551 First draft, March 1997, current draft December 1997 Abstract: We estimate the cross-sectional relationship between open market repurchases and accounting data for a large sample of dividend-paying and non-dividend-paying firms over a twelve year period (1984-95). Consistent with the hypothesis that firms use open market repurchases to reduce the agency costs of free cash flow, we find that repurchases are positively related to proxies for free cash flow and negatively related to proxies for marginal financing costs. We also examine the extent to which management stock options influence the choice between open market repurchases and dividend payments. Because the value of management stock options--like any call option--is negatively related to expected future dividend payments, management can increase the value of its stock options by substituting share repurchases for dividend growth. We find evidence that such substitution occurs: for dividend-paying firms, share repurchases are positively related and dividend increases are negatively related to a proxy for management stock options, whereas for non-dividend-paying firms, the relationship between repurchases and options is weak and statistically insignificant. Correspondence to: George Fenn, Milken Institute, 1250 Fourth St., Santa Monica, CA, 90401, 310-998-2699, gfenn@ ; Nellie Liang, Federal Reserve Board, Stop th 89, 20 and C Sts., NW, Washington, DC 20551, 202-452-2918, nliang@. * The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Milken Institute or the Federal Reserve Board. We thank Manju Puri and Stewart Myers for helpful comments, and Kyle Nagel, Mike Pizzi, and Melissa Post for outstand

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