Affiliation:
1. Dhofar University , Department of Finance and Economics , Oman
2. Dhofar University , Department of Accounting , Oman
Abstract
Abstract
The study aims to investigate the corporate dividend policy decisions in emerging countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our sample consists of 5,869 publicly listed firms from 29 emerging countries to explicate the observed trends in dividend policy during the pandemic. Logistic regressions are used to investigate the main factors that drive the propensity to change dividend payouts. Our analysis reveals that most firms opted to either increase or decrease their dividends, with a minority proportion deciding to maintain dividends. Notably, our findings demonstrate that firm profitability is the main driver of all types of dividend changes, except when firms opt to maintain or decrease dividends. Moreover, we find that when firms reduce dividends by over 70%, profitability emerges as a crucial determinant, thus bolstering the signaling hypothesis. The results are robust to sample size sensitivity and different levels of dividend changes. The findings of the study might have practical implications for corporate managers and policymakers in designing dividend decisions and policies under uncertain conditions. This research underscores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on corporate dividend policy in emerging countries and emphasizes the need to consider the level of dividend changes in exploring the dividend puzzle.
Reference54 articles.
1. Adaoglu, C. (2000). Instability in the dividend policy of the Istanbul stock exchange (ISE) corporations: Evidence from an emerging market. Emerging Markets Review, 1(3), 252-270, doi.org/10.1016/s1566-0141(00)00011-x.
2. Adjaoud, F. & Ben-Amar, W. (2010). Corporate governance and dividend policy: Shareholders’ protection or expropriation? Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, 37(5-6), 648-667.
3. Aivazian, V., Booth, L. & Cleary, S. (2003). Do emerging market firms follow different dividend policies from US firms? Journal of Financial Research, 26(3), 371-387.
4. Al‐Ajmi, J. & Abo Hussain, H. (2011).Corporate dividends decisions: Evidence from Saudi Arabia. The Journal of Risk Finance, 12(1), 41–56, https://doi.org/10.1108/15265941111100067.
5. Al-Ghazali, A.M. (2014). The Economic and Behavioural Factors affecting Corporate Dividend Policy: Theory and Evidence. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Bath, Bath, UK. Available online: http://opus.bath.ac.uk/46574 (Accessed: 15.05.2023).