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Article

Impact of Elimination of Dividend Distribution Tax on Indian Corporate Firms Amid COVID Disruptions

Indian Institute of Management Sirmaur, Himachal Pradesh, Sirmaur 173025, India
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14(9), 413; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090413
Submission received: 22 June 2021 / Revised: 1 August 2021 / Accepted: 2 August 2021 / Published: 1 September 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Economic and Financial Implications of COVID-19)

Abstract

:
Economic fallouts from COVID-19 have been unprecedented across all industries, with a handful of exceptions. The present study attempts to capture the impact of dividend distribution tax elimination, introduced through the Indian Finance Act 2020, on corporate dividend behavior in India. It explores the determinants of dividend payouts, changing payout decisions, dividend behavior of regular payers, and the prevalence of factors associated with changing payouts. Out of the top 1000 firms, based on their market capitalization at the Bombay Stock Exchange, 509 non-financial firms pursuing consistent dividend payments from 2015 to 2019 are analyzed. The study also examines the dividend behavior of regular payers exhibiting a stable or step-up payout from 2015 to 2019. COVID’s impact on the firm’s financial performance and sentiments seems to dominate, suppressing investors’ expectations of enhanced payouts associated with dividend distribution tax advantages, with considerable reductions in payouts and omissions shown by regular and irregular payers in 2020 and 2021 vis-à-vis the preceding years. The findings signify that the dividend payouts of sample firms are positively associated with the firms’ size, MBV ratio, and past dividends, and negatively allied with free cash flows and the EBITDA margin. Regular payers are observed to be more sensitive to past dividends. The study lends credence to the conservatism and prevalence of signaling and catering theories in the dividend behavior of Indian corporate firms.

1. Introduction

Dividend distribution is a crucial corporate financial decision, likely to have significant implications for a firm’s growth and shareholder value. The dividend constitutes the part of corporate earnings distributed to shareholders after making provisions for investment requirements and targeted capital structure (Higgins 1972; Walter 1963). Virtually, firms are free to decide on the level of profits to be distributed as dividends (Alekneviciene et al. 2015). However, the dividend is a complex decision attributable to numerous factors and pragmatic considerations across regions, sectors, industries (Ramaratnam et al. 2012; Singla and Samanta 2019), and environmental situations (Gangil and Nathani 2018; Ghose and Kabra 2016). Moreover, the firm’s payout flexibility is constrained to legal requirements (Al-Najjar and Kilincarslan 2017), debt covenants, available liquidity (Thaiyalnayaki and Reddy 2018), agency relationship (Jensen 1996), board composition, ownership structure (Rajput and Jhunjhunwala 2019; Juhmani 2020), viable investment opportunities, firm growth rate (Walter 1963), and investors’ expectations (Baker and Wurgler 2004; Bilel and Mondher 2021).
The literature provides numerous theories supporting the varied dividend-paying behavior seen in the corporate sector. While traditional Walter, Gordon, and Modigliani approaches postulate dividend decision-making to be an idealistic situation of the perfect capital market. Behavioral theories posit the influence of investors’ market sentiments and agency issues in firms’ payout decisions. As per the Walter approach (Walter 1963), dividends are the product of a firm’s rational choices based on viable investment opportunities and growth rate. At the same time, Gordon (Gordon 1959) relates dividend income to investor’s expectations. According to Gordon’s ‘a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush’ justification, investors prefer a current stream of income in the form of dividends, and therefore any postponement of payout is subject to adverse repercussions, discounting share prices (Bhattacharya 1979). Signaling and information theories also lend credence to the dividend as an important indicator of a firm’s profitability and well-being (Miler and Rock 1985; Mohd and Zaharudin 2019). As the firms’ sizes and scattered shareholdings start to grow, agency theory starts to become significant—the proponents of the theory advocate payouts as the redressal for minimizing agency conflicts (Rozeff 1982; Tran 2020; Jensen 1999).
The theories above have been empirically examined by a large number of studies (Dixit et al. 2020; Tran 2020; Baker and Weigand 2015), exploring corporate dividend behavior across sectors (Kapoor et al. 2010), regions (Dewasiri et al. 2019), and in varied settings, firm-, industry- or environment-specific, corroborating varied determinants for payout decisions and their impact on the value of firms (Martono et al. 2020; Mahenthiran et al. 2020). Despite these extensively explored aspects, the literature remains inconclusive in explaining the factors and theories guiding the firms’ behavior regarding dividends (Shetty and Rao 2020).
The Indian economy is among the fastest-growing economies in the world. Since liberalization, the Indian economic and financial system is transitioning towards a development into a self-sustained system, facilitating balanced growth across all sectors and segments. Beginning with the delicensing of some sectors (in 1990), India’s market capitalization at present accounts for three quarters of its nominal GDP1. About 8000 listed companies exist, channelizing the investment of millions of Indian and foreign investors. The increase in investors’ participation in the Indian capital market at NSE in recent years is provided in Figure 1. As shown, there has been a consistent rise in participation by retail individuals, proprietary firms, partnership firms, LLPs, Trust/Societies, AIF, Depository receipts, PMS clients, Statutory, FDI, OCB, FNs, OFIs, VC Funds, NBEF, etc. (Figure 1). As for the Security and Exchange Board of India, in the last decade, there has been a 100% increase in the Demat accounts, from 19 million in 2011 to 40.8 million in March 2020. Since the opening of the Indian Stock market for foreign investors, there has been a consistent rise in FDIs. With the onset of the pandemic, global financial conditions tightened sharply, precipitating a selloff by portfolio investors, unprecedented both in scale and pace. As per the RBI Financial Stability Report 2020, due to the lack of liquidity in debt markets, mutual funds (MFs) faced high redemption pressures during Q1:2020–21. However, the market started reviving from June 2020 onwards following improved sentiments, the weakening of the US dollar, and increased global monetary and fiscal stimulus. In November 2020, net FPI inflows were recorded at an all-time high, valued at USD 9.8 billion. During April–December 2020, net FPI inflow in equities were valued at USD 30.0 billion vis-à-vis USD 6.0 billion in the preceding year; mutual fund schemes witnessed net inflows of ₹2730 billion.2 Despite pandemic disruptions, during which developed economies across the globe noticed a significant decline in FDI, the Indian market has witnessed a 13% rise in the pandemic-battered year 2020.3
To ensure investor protection and fair and transparent corporate practices, the Indian regulatory authorities, through the Companies Act, SEBI, Income Tax Act, and relevant agencies, consistently monitor and amend the rules on a time-to-time basis. One such amendment has been introduced recently through the Finance Act 2020, wherein the dividend distribution tax (DDT) is eliminated, effective from 1 April 2020, shifting the incidence of tax from the distributing companies to the recipient shareholders. Taxes are evidently the dominating factor influencing corporate dividend decisions (Mahenthiran et al. 2020). These taxes act as discouraging factors for dividend distribution (Lintner 1956; Fama and French 1998; Brennan 1970). The increased corporate tax rates, achieved by reducing the earnings after tax, weaken companies’ capabilities to pay dividends (Singla and Samanta 2019). The DDT is levied on the distributed dividend, which is the constituent of after-tax profit. This involves double taxation, first in the form of tax on corporate earnings and, second, retaxing the same earnings when distributed as dividends, thus enabling the shareholders to receive a dividend net of DDT. Higher dividend tax rates, vis-à-vis capital gains taxes, result in unfavorable implications in the form of higher payouts on share prices (Brennan 1970; Deslandes et al. 2015; Fama and French 1998). The unfavorable consequences of DDT often make it a legitimate rationale for conservative payout decisions (Brennan 1970; Elayan et al. 2009; Ismail et al. 2018; Edgerton 2013; Chang and Rhee 1990; Labhane and Mahakud 2018; Karjalainen et al. 2020).
The literature studies are replete with evidence authenticating dividend cuts as signaling firms’ dimmed growth prospects. Therefore, managers are often reluctant for dividend reductions and appreciate step-up dividend payouts, portraying the typical dividend payment as naively following reported profits (Krieger et al. 2020). However, the economic fallout of the pandemic has compelled the corporate firms to drastically reduce dividends. The trend was in vogue across the globe (Wang and Guarino 2020), and Indian firms were no exception. The abolishment of DDT, Ceteris Paribus, was deemed to enhance the payouts by the Indian corporate firms, which earlier were discouraged or adjusted with share repurchase or bonus issues. However, amid dented profitability and cashflows of the firms across most sectors, coupled with uncertainty hovering in this milieu, the expectation of enhanced dividends associated with the elimination of DDT seems far-fetched. Given the drastic dividend cuts by the corporate pragmatism across the globe, COVID-19 is a unique event experienced from a dividend perspective. The changes in dividend policy amid COVID-19, and its consequences on companies’ performances and future dividends, is worth analyzing. The dividend distribution tax, albeit an essential element influencing dividend behavior, has not received much attention in the literature. Additionally, with the COVID-19 pandemic immediately following the Indian Financial Act 2020, the Indian corporate dividend behavior study is certainly worth exploring.
The present study examines the impact of the amended dividend tax and economic disruption of COVID on the dividend decision of Indian corporate firms. The study universe consists of the top 1000 non-financial firms, based on their market capitalization at BSE; inter se, 509 firms that have consistently distributed dividends from 2015 to 2019 form the final sample. The study contributes to the literature by capturing the impact of DDT elimination along with the consequences of COVID. The study also examines the influence of financial determinants postulated by existing theories and literature on the dividend decisions of Indian firms.
We observed the impact of COVID to be significant and superseded the possibility of high payouts associated with DDT abolishment. Dented financials have perhaps compelled the regular payer, as well as the non-regular payer firms for significant dividend cuts or omissions. Regression results establish the free cash flows, profitability, investment opportunities, growth rates, past dividends, and firms’ sizes as significant determinants influencing the payouts of Indian firms, with free cash flows, profitability, growth rate, and investment opportunities as the negative predictors and lag dividends as positive predictors influencing the dividend payouts. Findings reflect conservatism in the payout behavior of firms. We have also noted the significant transformation of the positive association of leverage and payout to negative insignificant relationship, post 2016. Perhaps the recognition of preference share capital as debt under Ind AS-32, effective from 1 April 2016, has made the firms more risk-averse and sensitive towards leverage. Findings lend credence to the dominance of the Walter, signaling, and catering theories in the dividend behavior of Indian corporate firms.
The following section deals with the literature review and derivation of research variables and hypotheses followed by research design, empirical results, concluding observations and implications, and future directions.

2. Literature Review

A dividend decision is a crucial financial decision relating to the distribution of corporate earnings to the shareholders. The dividend is the reward that a shareholder receives from a company’s profits on his shareholding (Singhania and Gupta 2012). Theoretically, dividend policy, i.e., the amount of profit to be distributed and retained in the business, is at the pure discretion of management. Indeed, the dividend is a complex decision attributable to numerous factors. Extant literature is replete with empirical evidence and theories underpinning corporate dividend behavior (Livoreka et al. 2014). However, despite this extensively explored aspect, the literature remains inconclusive in unfolding the factors and theories reinforcing the firms’ payouts (Shetty and Rao 2020; Frankfurter and Wood 2002).
The present study captures the change in dividend policy of the Indian corporate firm’s impact on the DDT elimination amid the economic disruption COVID. Secondly, the study examines the association of the firms’ financial traits, corroborated by traditional theories and extant literature, on corporate dividend behavior. The relevant literature supporting the research variables and hypotheses is provided as follows.

2.1. Profitability

Profitability is a prime constituent and crucial determinant of dividend decisions of a company (Lintner 1956; Lambrecht and Myers 2012; Anil 2008; Al-Najjar and Kilincarslan 2017; Pruitt and Gitman 1991). Lintner (1956) has found the change in earnings level to be the prime contributor driving the changes in the firm dividend policy, barring the exceptional circumstances (Lintner 1956). Studies across regions and sectors posit a positive association between the firms’ profitability and dividend decisions (Banerjee and De 2015; Abdulkadir et al. 2016; Lotto 2020a; Dewasiri et al. 2019; Rój 2019; Mehta 2012). Profitable firms with large reserves and free cash flows are deemed to afford higher payouts (Danil et al. 2020).

2.2. Free Cash Flow

The dividend is the residual profit paid from the free cash flow available at the firm after meeting the CAPEX and working capital requirements (Baker et al. 1985). Therefore, liquidity is a crucial factor in influencing the dividend payout. Extant studies establish the fact (Suliman Al-Fasfus 2020; Budagaga 2018; Rifat et al. 2020; Le et al. 2019; Rajesh Kumar and Sujit 2018; Chadha and Sharma 2015). Some studies suggest a positive relationship between the firm’s free cash flow and the dividend payout ratio (Baker and Weigand 2015; Rochmah and Ardianto 2020). In contrast, others posit a negative association between free cash flows and payouts (Utami and Inanga 2011).
Agency theory also associates dividends with free cash flows. The proponents of the agency theory postulate payouts as disciplinary moves to prevent the irrational spending of firms’ cash flows by the management, and empire-building in their narrow interests (John and Knyazeva 2006; Jensen 1999; Floyd et al. 2015; Driver et al. 2020). Management inertia for initiating dividends represents a unique agency concern (Smith and Pennathur 2019). The firms with free cash flows and low investment opportunities are more likely to attract agency conflicts (Jensen 1986; Wang 2010). Therefore, the firms countering agency problems are deemed to disseminate cash flows more promptly via dividend payouts, buybacks, or unproductive acquisitions (Jensen 1996).

2.3. Financing and Investment Decisions

Dividend, financing, and investment decisions are crucial corporate finance decisions which influence a firm’s value (Daas et al. 2020). The proponents of residual theory avow the dividend as a passive residual (Brav et al. 2005; Higgins 1972). Dividend policy, according to these authors, entails decisions relating to the distribution of the residual earnings among its shareholders (Rój 2019). Theoretically, the dividend is more of a financing decision determined by a firm’s investment requirements (Walter 1956; Brav et al. 2005). After meeting the investment requirements and adjusting the desired capital structure, residual earnings are distributed as dividends (Smith and Watts 1992; Miller and Modigliani 1961). Thus, the dividend disbursement to ordinary shareholders is contingent on the firm’s financing needs, the viable investment opportunities, and the growth rate (Ardestani et al. 2013). Research studies establish this fact.

2.4. Growth Rate

As per Walter’s model, the degree of appreciation in share value is allied with the proportion of earnings retained and their profitable utilization (Walter 1956). A firm with lucrative investment opportunities and the potential to earn higher returns can enhance its value by squeezing its payout to zero. Consequently, low dividend payout ratios constitute an accepted feature of growth stocks since the reinvestment into the business is presumed to be more beneficial for the shareholders. At the same time, high retention by low-earning firms may cause negative implications for share prices. Empirical studies corroborate the negative association between the firm’s growth rate and dividend payouts. The firms with good investment opportunities have been observed as low dividend payers, irrespective of their earnings levels (Le et al. 2019; Danil et al. 2020; Sharma 2020; Pahi and Yadav 2021; Rozeff 1982; Dixit et al. 2020; Lu et al. 2014; Fama and French 2001; Al-Kuwari 2010). The negative association between a firm’s growth rate and the propensity of payout is well supported by the agency (Al-Kuwari 2010) and the life-cycle theories (Bhattacharya et al. 2020; Yousef et al. 2021). Studies associate dividend policy with the firm’s life cycle (Dixit et al. 2020; Dewasiri et al. 2019; Labhane and Das 2015; Abdulkadir et al. 2016; Moon et al. 2015). The optimal dividend policy hinges upon the firm’s life cycle stage (Bulan and Subramanian 2011); fluctuating cash flows and investment opportunities with a transition in the growth stage dominates the firm’s propensity of payout (Bhattacharya et al. 2020; Drobetz et al. 2015; Dickinson 2011). The mature companies with stable earnings, goodwill, and expertise maintain reasonable reserves and have better access to external capital market; therefore, they are more likely to pay dividends, compared to young firms with more investment avenues and constrained resources (Ranajee et al. 2018; El-Ansary and Gomaa 2012).

2.5. Leverage

Studies posit financial leverage as another crucial determinant influencing a firm’s payout policy (Tahir et al. 2020; Santhosh Kumar and Bindu 2018; Banerjee and De 2015; Hadian 2019). Firms with a low debt ratio are pragmatic in maintaining high payouts and vice-versa (Harry DeAngelo and DeAngelo 2007; Labhane 2017; Lotto 2020b; Banerjee and De 2015). These findings are consistent across regions (Alam 2012; Labhane 2019b) and industries (Moon et al. 2015; Gakumo and Nanjala 2017). High-levered firms carry obligations to pay out cash in future periods, and thus have constrained cash flows for capital expenditures and dividends (Walter 1963). This mitigates agency problems (Chaleeda et al. 2019), and maintains ample liquidity to promptly honor the obligations under creditors’ pressure, or voluntarily compel the high-levered firms to maintain low payouts (Chevalier et al. 2020; Tse 2020).

2.6. Investors’ Expectation

Catering theory postulates dividend decisions instigated by investors’ preference for dividend payers in the market. Managers cater to investors by paying dividends when the market puts a premium on dividend-paying stocks (Baker and Wurgler 2004). Studies (Labhane 2020; Wang et al. 2016; Pieloch-Babiarz 2020; Lu et al. 2014; Bilel and Mondher 2020; Rochmah and Ardianto 2020) document the payout decision as positively associated with the premium that investors add on dividend-paying stocks.
For investors, dividends constitute a vital source of income and, therefore, a key component for evaluating stock price (Wang and Guarino 2020). At any time, the share price is contingent upon the investors’ expectations regarding the dividend stream, the terminal market price, supplemented with their system of weighting the possible outcomes per period and through time (Walter 1963). According to Gordon’s theory (Gordon 1959), investors expect a regular dividend income on their investment. Deferring dividends may invoke a sense of uncertainty among the investors, enhancing the likelihood of discounting the company’s share prices (Shetty and Rao 2020; Tiwari and Pal 2020; Simoes Vieira 2011). Studies observed the significant influence of a firm’s dividend payouts on market prices (Shetty and Rao 2020), price-earnings ratio, and shareholders’ wealth (Saraswat 2018; Sulistiono and Yusna 2020; Baskin 1989; Mehta et al. 2014).
Signaling and information hypotheses also link the payout policy with investors’ reactions (Miler and Rock 1985; Bhattacharya 1979). The decision to initiate and continue dividends possesses the predictive power to differentiate the share price returns of dividend-paying firms over non-dividend-paying firms (Labhane 2020). The dividend is expected to mirror the firm’s performance (Thaiyalnayaki and Reddy 2018). They are deemed to possess vital information about the distributing firm’s profitability and cashflows (Fama and French 1998; Dionne and Ouederni 2011; Miklus and Oplotnik 2016; Lin and Lee 2021; Budagaga 2020). The dividend payout policy signals good news to investors (Tahir et al. 2020; Anand 2004). Studies document the dominance of signaling theory in a firm’s dividend behavior (Baker et al. 1985; Batabyal and Robinson 2017; Daniels et al. 1997; Taleb 2019).
Managers implicitly assume dividends as unbiased signals of the firm’s financial health and prospect to the investors. A decrease in payouts is expected to foreshadow a decline in the firm’s prospects (Krieger et al. 2020). Studies examine the expected future earnings and pattern of past dividends as significant predictors affecting the firm’s payout decisions (Qamar et al. 2014; Baker and Weigand 2015; Budagaga 2018). Corporate firms are often reluctant to deviate from the past dividends and are persistent with dividend smoothening (Mahenthiran et al. 2020; Qamar et al. 2014). Firms combating volatile earnings and high business risk, therefore, generally prefer low payouts to restore financial flexibility (Lambrecht and Myers 2012; Pinto and Rastogi 2019; Alekneviciene et al. 2015; Poulsen et al. 2013; Fliers 2019; Pruitt and Gitman 1991; Krieger et al. 2020; Loukil 2020; Agrawal 2020).

2.7. Environment

Studies associate the change in the dividend behavior of the firms with the changing environment-market, political, industry, and regulatory conditions (Ranajee et al. 2018; Rifat et al. 2020; Loukil 2020; Hamed Al-Yahyaee et al. 2010; Bilel and Mondher 2021; Wang and Guarino 2020). In an Indian study, Banerjee and Das found payouts of pre-recession to be positively associated with assets’ growth rates and profitability, and payouts of the post-recession period with profitability and financial leverage (Banerjee and De 2015). A comparative study of emerging market and U.S. firms (Anjali and Raju 2017) reports identical dividend behavior of firms across regions, with a significant difference in dividend determinants of U.S. firms and the emerging market. They found the U.S. firm’s payouts to be more sensitive to profitability, debt, and the market-to-book ratio. In emerging economies, the asset mix is found to be more dominant due to more reliance on bank debt. An Indian study (Pandey 2007) substantiates the underdeveloped financial system to be responsible for the low payout of Indian firms. Other studies also corroborate regional factors as essential determinants influencing dividend policies (Aivazian et al. 2003). Recent studies have explored the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on corporate dividend behavior (Adehi and Maijamaa 2020; Wang and Guarino 2020; Pettenuzzo et al. 2020; Krieger et al. 2020; Cejnek et al. 2020). Studies reveal significant dividend omissions amid the economic disruption of COVID. These findings are consistent across regions and sectors.

2.8. Taxes

As per Modigliani and Miller’s irrelevance theories of capital structure (Modigliani and Miller 1958) and dividends (Miller and Modigliani 1961), the capital structure and dividends are irrelevant decisions for a firm’s value in a world of no taxes. Tax is an integral part of the economic policies of any economy; therefore, it is a potentially vital consideration influencing corporate decisions (MacKIE-Mason 1990). The dividend tax affects a firm’s value (Fama and French 1998; Karjalainen et al. 2020; Aggarwal and Tiwary 2019). The corporate tax rate and dividend distribution tax act as the discouraging factors for dividend distribution. The primary effect of taxes results from their impact on the magnitude of net earnings, which is a primary determinant of the volume of dividends (Lintner 1956). The increase in corporate tax rates reduces earnings after tax, weakening the companies’ ability to pay dividends (Singla and Samanta 2019). The DDT is levied on the after-tax income distributed to the shareholders as a dividend; this involves taxing the already taxed income and enabling shareholders to be paid the after-tax (DDT tax) amount of the actual dividend distributed by the company (Datta et al. 2014). The adverse tax implication of the DDT raises the dividend puzzle as to why management distributes dividends (Al-Najjar and Kilincarslan 2019; Dewasiri Narayanage and Yatiwella 2016; Black 1996). The mystery of dividend payments, albeit with unfavorable tax implications, remains inconclusive, with extant literature manifesting signaling, agency redressal, clientele effect, earnings quality management (Ajay and Madhumathi 2015), corporate governance (Rajput and Jhunjhunwala 2019; Nguyen et al. 2021; Pahi and Yadav 2021), ownership structure (Basu and Sen 2015; Rajverma et al. 2019), group affiliation (Labhane and Mahakud 2019), and many more justifications for dividend payments (Dewasiri Narayanage and Yatiwella 2016; Goyal 2019).
Nevertheless, the influence of the dividend tax on dividend policy cannot be overlooked. Studies establish the influence of change in capital gain and dividend taxes on corporate dividend policies (Blouin et al. 2011). The study of private companies in Finland by (Karjalainen et al. 2020) documents the willingness to pay tax-exempted dividends and avoid unnecessary company income tax as crucial elements guiding earnings management. In a study of Canadian firms (Deslandes et al. 2015), the reduction in DDT is found to have a favorable implication on firms’ payouts. Findings report an increase in a firm’s payouts following a tax cut; the increase was more significant for the firms where the reduced tax rate was favorable for the shareholders. Indian economy studies have established similar findings; the study by (Pahi and Yadav 2021) found DDT to be a suppressing factor for dividend distribution. Labhane (2018) noticed high dividend distribution taxes imposed by the government to be the reason for more dividend smoothening by Indian corporate firms.

2.9. DDT Elimination in India and Dividend-Payout

The Indian economy is among the fastest-growing emerging markets and has undergone regulatory changes from time to time to make it more independent, transparent, and pro-investment. With the increased market capitalization and vast shareholders base, corporate policies have always been under the close surveillance of the Indian regulators. With the increase in the institutional investors, in the February 2020 budget, the Finance-minister announced the abolishment of the dividend distribution tax, effective from 1 April 2020.
Before 1997, India followed the classical tax system. Following in the footsteps of the western economies, the DDT was introduced in 1997. Since then, the DDT rate has undergone consistent changes (Refer Table 1). Under the old regime (before F.Y. 2020), the DDT rate was 17.65% and effectively 20.56% including the surcharge and cess 20.56 % including the surcharge and cess, enabling the shareholders to receive hardly 80 percent value of the actual dividend amount distributed by the Companies. The abolishment of DDT, prima facie, is an encouraging factor for dividend distribution by Indian corporate firms. With the exception of the institutional investors, large shareholding groups, and the recipients who fall into the high income tax slab, the new regime seems to be a win–win situation for the distributing companies, as well as the recipient shareholders.
However, given the aftermath of the pandemic, where the majority of industries suffered dented productivity, profitability, cash flows, and sustainability challenges in the new normal, the possibility of an enhanced payout expected due to DDT elimination seems far-fetched. This paper examines the changes in the payout policies of Indian corporate firms following DDT elimination under the Financial Act 2020, amid the economic disruption of COVID. Additionally, it investigates the impact of firms’ financial traits, corroborated by existing theories and empirical literature, on the dividend behavior of regular and irregular dividend payers.
The following section details the research design, variables extraction, research models, data collection, and sample firms.

3. Research Methodology

3.1. Objectives

The study explored the changes in the payouts of Indian corporate firms, consequent to DDT elimination effective from 1 April 2020. It also examined the financial determinants of the changing payout behavior.

3.2. Sample Firms and Data

The top 1000 listed firms, based on their market capitalization at BSE India, formed the universe of the study. For the analysis, the non-financial firms, which have consistently paid a dividend during the Years 2015 to 2020, were considered. The sample was further sub-divided into regular and non-regular payers. Firms were categorized as regular payers if they have consistently maintained stable or increasing payouts from 2015 to 2019.
The total sample consisted of 509 firms, including 65 regular payers (details contained in Appendix A and Appendix B).

3.3. Variables of the Study

3.3.1. Dependent Variables and the Proxy Measures Used

To examine the dividend behavior of sample firms, dividend payouts, calculated as the percentage of dividend paid over earnings after-tax, were used as proxy measures for dividend policy. The measure was used in earlier studies by (Labhane 2019b; Dewasiri et al. 2019). The dividend payout ratio and dividend yield were widely accepted as measures of dividend policy. However, with the pandemic-induced exacerbation of stock prices, dividend yields were expected to exhibit a distorted view and were therefore excluded from the analysis. The study used the annual observations of dividend payout percentages.
For analyzing the impact of DDT and COVID-19 pandemic, the direction of increases and decreases in, cuts to, and the omission of, dividend payouts were considered, as used by Krieger et al. (2020). Firms were classified (via an indicator variable DivCut) as enacting a dividend cut when the dividend payout percentage in the year t declined relative to the previous year t − 1; DivCut = 0, if the change in the DivPer ≥ 0; otherwise, 1.

3.3.2. Independent Variables

Extant literature confirmed the association of the firm’s financial traits with corporate dividend behavior. The firm’s financial fundamentals, corroborated by empirical literature as predictors of dividend decisions, were examined through factors analysis to extract the dependent variables for the study. Upon running the exploratory factor analysis varimax rotation approach on 25 variables, we obtained eight representative variables. The variables with the highest factor loadings and deemed reasonable to affect dividend decisions were used for the analysis. Other than the extracted variables, the study also examines the impact of the lag dividend as the independent variable. Appendix C contains the results of the factors analysis. Table 1 enlists the dependent variables, the underlying theories, factor loadings, and formulae used for measuring the variables, respectively.
Explanatory variables potentially predictive of dividend change, cuts or omissions: free cash flows, profitability, leverage, market premium, growth rates, firm size, log assets, market capitalization, and sales were used to analyze the change in dividends and dividend cuts. Earlier studies (Krieger et al. 2020; Fama and French 2002; Brav et al. 2005) used these controls.

3.4. Research Model

To assess the direction of dividend change, the frequency and magnitude of dividend increase, decrease, cuts, and omission were reviewed from 2015 to 2021. To capture the influence of DDT changes (effective from 1 April 2020 onwards), the dividend payouts from 1 April 2020 onwards were considered as payouts of the year 2021. The statistical significance of changes in the dividend payout (DivPer) and DivY (Dividend yield) of 2020, 2021, and pre-2020 periods (the average of the years 2015 to 2019) were examined using a paired sample t-test.
Further, using panel data regression analysis, the determinants of dividend payouts, changes in payouts, and dividend cuts were examined. The panel data analysis was an effective approach for analyzing cross-sectional data. It aided in incorporating the effects of unobservable firm-specific and time-specific variables, along with quantifiable factors. It was a robust approach to deal with data heteroskedasticity (Wooldridge 2013). This method was extensively used in earlier studies (Bostanci et al. 2018; Kajola et al. 2015; Pinto and Rastogi 2019; Labhane and Das 2015).
Due to the shortness of the panel, the study used linear panel models with fixed effects. To capture the impact of the pandemic and DDT elimination, two dummy variables, dummy 2020 and dummy 2021, were used.
The regression models represented by Equations (1) and (2) were used to analyze the determinants of dividend payouts, changes in payout, and dividend cuts.
Model 1: DivPeri,t = αi,t + β1EBITDAi,t + β2LogTAi,t + β3BVSi,t + β4CFi,t + β5FCFi,t + β6ROTAi,t + β7MBVRi,t + β8DEi,t + β9EBITDARi,t + β10Taxi,t + β11LagDivi,t + ɛi,t
Equation (1) identified the association of firm financial traits (mentioned in Table 1) on dividend payout:
Model 2: DivPerit = αit + β1Dummy2020it + β2Dummy2021it + β3FCFit + β4EBITDAMarginit + β5ROTAit + β6LogTAit+ β7LogMcapit + β8LogSalesit + β9MBVratioit + β10DEit + ɛit
Equation (2) assessed the predictors of change in dividend payout and dividend cuts. Factors potentially predictive of dividend change, cuts and omissions: free cash flows, profitability, leverage, market premium, growth rates, log assets, market capitalization, and sales, formed the explanatory variables in Equation (2).
For analyzing the dividend cuts, firms enacting a dividend cut were classified via an indicator variable DivCut; DivCut = 1, if ChgDivPer < 0; otherwise 1:
  • Dummy2020 = Dummy variable for year 2020;
  • Dummy2021 = Dummy variable for year 2021;
  • DivPeri,t = Dividend payout percentage of firm i at time period t;
  • EBITDAi,t = Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization;
  • LogTAi,t = Natural log of total assets;
  • BVSi,t = Book value per share;
  • CFi,t = EBITDA interest taxes dividend;
  • FCFi,t = CF*1/Total assets;
  • ROTAi,t = EBITDA/Total assets;
  • MBVRi,t = Proxy of market premium = Market cap/Net worth;
  • DEi,t = Debt–equity ratio = Total debt/Equity funds;
  • EBITDARi,t = EBITDA/Net sales;
  • Taxi,t = Corporate tax rate = Provision for taxes/Earnings before taxes;
  • LagDivi,t = DivPert−1;
  • ɛi,t = Error term;
  • DivCut = Dummy variable for dividend cut;
If DivPer of firm i for time period t < DivPer of t − 1, then DivCut = 1; otherwise, 0.

4. Empirical Findings

4.1. Impact of the DDT Elimination under Finance Act 2020 on the Corporate Dividend Behavior

Table 2 exhibits the paired sample t-test conducted to assess the difference between the dividend payout and yield of the F.Y. 2020–21 and the preceding years. The findings corroborate significant changes in the corporate dividend behavior in the years 2021 and 2020 vis-à-vis pre 2020 years. Significant t-values authenticate the dividend payout of the years 2020 and 2021 to be significantly different from the pre 2020 period; however, there seems to be no substantial difference in the payout percentage of 2021 and 2020. As expected, due to the pandemic-induced exacerbation of stock prices, results exhibit a significant difference in the dividend yield of 2020 vis-a-vis the 2021 and pre 2020 periods.
Table 3, Table 4 and Table 5 exhibit the direction of the dividend payouts over the last six years (2015 onwards). Table 3 and Figure 2 document the number and proportions of firms enacting increases, decreases, or omissions in payouts. As portrayed in Figure 2, there are no dividend cuts by Indian corporate firms, except for the years 2020 and 2021.
The statistics of dividend cuts and omissions reflect firms’ payout sensitivities to the change in tax regimes and the economic environment. As provided, there seems a considerable decline in the number of payers’ firms and the upsurge in the dividend-cutting firms from 2018 onwards (Table 4). The dividend-reducing firms, which were below 20 percent till 2017, elevated to 45 percent in 2018. Perhaps, bringing the deemed dividend under the ambit of DDT, effective from 1 April 2018 (as per the Finance bill, 2018)4, which was hitherto taxable in the recipients’ hands, is the reason for this declined payout.
The elimination of DDT, effective from 1 April 2020, was envisaged to enhance the payouts by the Indian firms. However, contrary to the expectations of enhanced dividends associated with the DDT elimination, the data manifest an increasing pattern of dividend cuts from 2020 onwards for the regular, as well as the irregular, payers. The F.Y. 2020 shows a considerable spike in the dividend cuts by the regular and irregular payers. Eighty percent of the regular payers, consistently following a stable or increasing payout pattern from 2015 onwards, endorsed dividend reduction or entire omissions in 2020. Wherein the dividend-declining firms have spiked from 46 to 56 percent from 2019 to 2020, the year 2021 exhibits dividend cuts of more than 65 percent of the companies. The regular payers unveiled a similar pattern, with the percentage of dividend-omitting firms rising from 27 to 41 percent in 2021 (Table 3).
Table 5 exhibits the dividend cuts observed across the sectors from 2015 to 2021. There seems to be an increasing pattern of dividend cuts from 2018 onwards. The COVID-affected years (2020 and 2021) unveil a spurt in dividend cuts across all the sectors, with the service industry being the most affected. The dividend cuts enacting service sector firms, which were limited to 45 percent by 2020, rose above 60 percent during 2020. Perhaps, the changing industry dynamics and sustainability challenges in this milieu compelled the management to retain the surplus cash and restore financial flexibility (Table 5).
From these findings, it is reasonable to conclude that the impact of COVID has been devastating for the Indian corporate sector. The restrictive economic activities and inflicted financials and sentiments, have instigated drastic dividend cuts by the firms, which have ignored their past practices, as well as investors’ expectations, and tax advantages associated with the eliminated DDT.

4.2. Determinants of Changing Dividend Behavior

4.2.1. Determinants of Dividend Payout

This study attempts a regression analysis to trace the association of a firm’s financial traits (provided in Table 1) on their dividend payouts. Table 6 documents the parameter estimates computed as per Equation 1. The R-square value (0.75) authenticates the three-fourths influence of the explanatory variables in explaining the variance in the dividend payouts of the sample firms analyzed. Model findings confirm the firm’s size, MBV ratio, and past dividends as the positive predictors of dividend payouts. At the same time, the firm’s free cash flows and EBITDA margin are discerned as significant negative predictors influencing payouts (Table 6).
Appendix D shows the segregated year-wise regression results from 2015–2021. Findings validate the assumed financial predictors to be significantly associated with the dividend behavior of the corporate firms. The FCF, lag dividend, growth rate, firms’ sizes, and book values are prime factors pervasive in most of the years. All of the years portray the significant negative association of FCF and the positive influence of lag dividends on the dividend payouts, thus, lending credence to the conservative payout behavior of the firms with the dominance of catering theory.
It is worth mentioning that the Lag dividend and MBV, which consistently appear as significant positive predictors of dividend payouts in all the years, have been discerned as insignificant during the year 2020. The findings narrate the severity of the economic consequences of COVID-19 on the firm’s financials and sentiments that compelled them to make dividend cuts, circumventing their past practices.
Findings also unearthed the changes in the leverage and dividend payout relationship after 2015. The debt–equity ratio, which seemingly shared a significant positive association with payouts during 2015, appeared to be a negative and irrelevant predictor in later years. The negative association of the debt–equity ratio with payouts reflected the risk-averse behavior of the management. Firms with a high leverage preferred low payouts to restore financial flexibility (Harry DeAngelo and DeAngelo 2007; Banerjee and De 2015; Agrawal 2020). It was possible that firms utilized debt proceeds for paying dividends in 2015. The transition in the leverage and dividend payout association from positive to negative from 2016 onwards was due to the influence of the Indian Accounting Standards 32 (Ind AS 32), enacted in April 2016 on all listed and non-listed companies exceeding a net worth of INR 5 billion. The new standard directs recognized redeemable preference shares (RPS) as debt capital, which earlier were deemed a part of a firm’s equity. The AS 32 also mandated disclosing the debt component of Optionally Converted Preference Shares (OCPS) in the balance sheet. Preference shares were a flexible source of financing for the highly levered firms. Paying fixed preference dividends enabled the firms to restore their financial flexibility without diluting their equity control and maintaining optimal leverage. However, the AS-32 impeding the management liberty of channeling the RPS and OCPS, which diluted their debt–equity ratio, compelled the highly levered companies to cautiously utilize debt capital. Plausibly, the firms using debt funds for payouts up until 2015 became risk-averse post AS 32 enforcements.
Given the significant dividend cuts and omissions observed by the regular payer firms in 2020 and 2021 (Table 3), this study examined the payout predictors of regular payers. Here, the regular payers represented the firms that persistently followed a stable or step-up dividend payout from 2015 to 2019. Table 7 documents the key results. R-square value substantiated a ninety-five percent influence on explanatory variables in explaining the variance in the dividend behavior of the regular payers. Results corroborated the dividend payout of regular payers to be positively related to cash flows and lag dividend and negatively with EBITDA margin and free cash flows. Findings lent credence to conservative payout policy followed by regular payers with more inclination towards retaining the profits of businesses. The positive relationship between the cash flow and dividend payout exhibited the dominance of agency concern in dividend payout decisions (Table 7).

4.2.2. Determinants of Changing Dividend Payouts and Dividend Cuts

This study explored the determinants of changing payouts using Equation (2). The Dummy 2020 and Dummy 2021 exhibited dummy variables used to capture the influence of the years 2020 and 2021. Table 8 portrays the results of the panel regression run with fixed effects. Findings showed dividend payouts to be significantly positively associated with firms’ sizes (represented by Log TA) and MBV ratios, and negatively with FCF and EBITDA margins. Dividend payouts of regular payers were found to be negatively associated with FCFs, and positively with Log Mcap. The results authenticated the influence of the pandemic and possibly the DDT elimination (implemented from April 2021 onwards) on the payouts of the sample firms. The findings showed that the years 2020 and 2021 were significantly associated with the changing payouts. For the regular payers, the year 2021 was negatively associated with payout (Table 8).
This study further examined the predictors of dividend cuts. Table 9 exhibits the key results. Findings portrayed dividend cuts as positively associated with FCF and negatively with ROTA, Log TA, and MBV ratio. Prima facie, these results corroborate the management’s emphasis on utilizing the payout policy as a signal to control investor sentiments. The positive association of FCF with dividend cuts unveiled the management’s reluctance to disseminate the free cash flows as a dividend. However, to suppress the negative signal of low growth and associated adverse investors’ reactions, the Indian corporate firms tried to avoid dividend cuts. The negative relationship between MBV and divided cuts signaled the prevalence of catering theory in the payout behavior of Indian corporate firms. According to the catering theory, payouts were instigated by the investors’ premiums for the dividend-paying shares (Baker and Wurgler 2004; Labhane 2020).
For the regular payers, findings project the dividend cuts to be primarily associated with the disruption of the pandemic. As provided, excluding Dummy 2020 and Dummy 2021, no significant predictor association was traced between the dividend cuts of regular payers and explanatory variables (Table 9).

5. Discussion

Effective from 1 April 2020, dividend taxation in India switched from the DDT regime to the classical system of dividend taxes. The DDT was a costly proposition for the shareholders. It involved taxing the shareholders twice, first as direct corporate taxes on earnings and secondly via imposing DDT on the after-tax earnings distributed as dividends. The new regime (classical system), eliminating the DDT, made dividend income taxable in the hands of recipient shareholders, shifting the tax incidence from the distributing companies to the shareholders. Hitherto, the DDT rate of 15%, and effectively 20.56% including surcharge and cess, apportioned the shareholders with 79 percent of the actual dividend distributed by the companies. Therefore, the elimination of DDT was expected to foresee the enhanced payouts by Indian firms for the FY 2020–2021.
Contrary to the expectations of enhanced payouts in 2021 consequent to DDT elimination, data demonstrate the increasing pattern of dividend cuts for the regular, as well as irregular, payers across all sectors. The year 2021 has witnessed dividends cut by more than 65 percent of the companies. There was an increase in dividend-omitting regular payer firms from 27 to 41 percent from 2020 to 2021 (Table 3).
The corporate payouts in India were sensitive to the changes in the economic environment and regulations. We noticed a considerable decline in the number of payers’ firms and the upsurge in dividend-cutting firms from 2018 onwards (Table 4). Endorsing DDT on the deemed dividend effective from 1 April 2018, which earlier was taxable as recipients’ income, is possibly the rationale for shrinking payouts. Findings corroborate significant changes in the corporate dividend behavior during the years 2021 and 2020 vis-à-vis the pre 2020 period. The years 2020 and 2021 witnessed remarkable cuts or entire omissions of dividends by the sample firms. Eighty percent of the regular payers, demonstrating the stable or increasing payout from 2015 onwards, have endorsed the reduction or entire omission of dividends during 2020. The trend is also in vogue in 2021.
The findings revealed that the uncertainty associated with the new normal, caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, was hard-hitting for firms’ financial and management sentiments. Ignoring past practices, investor reactions, and tax advantages associated with the eliminated DDT, the firms practicing stable payouts even showed drastic dividend cuts and omissions.
The study also examined the determinants of dividend payouts and the changing payout ratio. Free cash flows, lag dividend, market-to-book value, profitability, firm size, leverage, and growth rate were observed as significant predictors influencing dividend payouts, as corroborated by earlier studies (Baker et al. 2019; Kumar and Ranjani 2019; Franc-Dąbrowska et al. 2020). We found dividend payouts to be positively associated with the firm’s size, MBV ratio, and past dividends, and negatively associated with free cash flows and EBITDA margins (Table 6). These findings lent credence to the conservative dividend payout behavior of Indian corporate firms with the dominance of catering theory. These findings were similar to earlier studies (Baker and Wurgler 2004; Labhane 2020).
The payouts of regular payers appeared to be positively allied with cash flows and past dividends, and negatively with EBITDA margin and free cash flows (Table 7). The negative relationship between EBITDA margins and FCFs corroborated the conservative payout behavior of Indian corporate firms, emphasizing retaining the profits of the business. The positive relationship between the cash flow and dividend payouts of regular payers authenticated the dominance of agency concern in the payout decision of the firms.
The findings exhibited the years 2020 and 2021 as significantly associated with the changing payout, prima facie, authenticating the the influence of the pandemic and possibly the DDT elimination (implemented from April 2021 onwards). The year 2021 was found to be significantly negatively associated with payouts, corroborating the dividend omission practiced by regular payers (Table 8). The dividend cuts by regular payers were positively associated with FCFs and negatively with ROTA, Log TA, and market-to-book value (Table 9). The positive association of FCF with dividend cuts unveiled the management’s conservatism in disbursing the free cash flows as dividends. At the same time, they preferred to avoid dividend cuts to suppress the negative signal of low growth and associated adverse reactions of investors. The negative relationship between MBV and dividend cuts signaled the prevalence of catering and signaling theories in the payout behavior of Indian corporate firms. The management perhaps used the payout policy as a signal to control investor sentiments. Investors were sensitive to dividend cuts; therefore, managers with unobservable solid cash earnings preferred high payouts after retaining an adequate amount, to ensure that the next period payout should not fall short vis-à-vis the current period (Baker et al. 2016). As expected, we found the payout of regular payer firms to be significantly positively associated with the past dividends.

6. Concluding Observation

Effective from 1 April 2020, the dividend taxation in India shifted to the classical system, thereby transferring the incidence of dividend tax from the dividend-distributed companies to the recipients’ shareholders. The adverse tax implications of dual taxation often make DDT a legitimate rationale of conservative payouts by corporate firms. The study attempts to examine the impact of DDT elimination on the dividend payout of Indian firms.
The economic fallout of the COVID pandemic was found to be pervasive in the payouts of Indian corporate firms. Contrary to the expected rise in payouts following the DDT elimination, Indian firms showed substantial cuts or entire omissions of dividends during 2020 and 2021. Overall results reflect the conservative payout behavior of the firms, with payouts as residual decisions negatively associated with free cash flows, profitability, growth rate, and positively related to the market premium. The findings exhibited the dominance of signaling, agency, and catering theory in the dividend payout of Indian corporate firms.
Dividend cuts and omissions were unwelcoming events for the investors in the market. Therefore, corporate firms were generally reluctant to signal pessimism by reduced payouts (Jensen et al. 2010). However, with the advent of the economic crisis, dividend cuts were the flexible sources of managing the liquidity crunch and uncertainty (Iyer et al. 2017). The economic disruption of COVID-19 was pervasive across all the sectors, bar a few (Laing 2020), and the dividend cuts behavior was logical and in vogue across economies (Wang and Guarino 2020; Krieger et al. 2020). With the resurgence of COVID-19, with more severity than the previous wave, the investors may foresee more dividend changes in the coming years. However, with the elimination of DDT, shares of the Indian companies practicing a stable dividend policy are worth investing in from the perspective of regular dividend income.
This paper’s findings have practical implications for managers and investors. The dividend payout is a crucial decision likely to affect firms’ growth prospects and stability. Apart from constituting the return on the stock investment, the dividends are vital signals of firms’ performances and profitability to their investors. Using the significant determinants explored in the study, managers can formulate a stable dividend policy equilibrating the firm’s requirements and investors’ expectations.
The dividend payouts are not necessarily informative of the firm’s profitability and cash flows. For the investors expecting a stable dividend income, the shares of regular dividend-paying firms are a better investment alternative.
With the increasing Indian and foreign investors base, regulatory policies ensuring transparency in dividend decisions can aid in resolving the information asymmetry associated with dividend policies.
The present analysis is limited to the financial factors; incorporating the qualitative traits can perhaps facilitate a widened view of the current and future development of dividend policy.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The study is based on secondary data extracted from the Companies’ website, SEBI, RBI, and other sources duly cited in the paper.

Acknowledgments

I would like to acknowledge the reviewers for their useful insight that has helped in improving the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Sample Firms Analyzed

1Carborundum Universal Ltd.
2Grindwell Norton Ltd.
3Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ltd.
4Gujarat Ambuja Exports Ltd.
s5Tata Coffee Ltd.
6GM Breweries Ltd.
7United Breweries Ltd.
8Alicon Castalloy Ltd.
9Apollo Tyres Ltd.
10Atul Auto Ltd.
11Automotive Axles Ltd.
12Bajaj Auto Ltd.
13Banco Products (India) Ltd.
14Endurance Technologies Ltd.
15Escorts Ltd.
16Exide Industries Ltd.
17Gabriel India Ltd.
18GP Petroleums Ltd.
19Hindustan Composites Ltd.
20Hi-Tech Gears Ltd.
21Jamna Auto Industries Ltd.
22JK Tyre & Industries Ltd.
23JTEKT India Ltd.
24LG Balakrishnan & Brothers Ltd.
25Lumax Auto Technologies Ltd.
26Maharashtra Scooters Ltd.
27Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd.
28Man Industries (India) Ltd.
29Panama Petrochem Ltd.
30Rico Auto Industries Ltd.
31Sandhar Technologies Ltd.
32Shanthi Gears Ltd.
33Sterling Tools Ltd.
34Swaraj Engines Ltd.
35Tide Water Oil Company (India) Ltd.
36Timken India Ltd.
37TVS Srichakra Ltd.
38Wabco India Ltd.
39AIA Engineering Ltd.
40Alphageo (India) Ltd.
41Apar Industries Ltd.
42Bharat Electronics Ltd.
43Engineers India Ltd.
44GMM Pfaudler Ltd.
45Graphite India Ltd.
46Ingersoll-Rand (India) Ltd.
47Kirloskar Brothers Ltd.
48Orient Abrasives Ltd.
49Orient Refractories Ltd.
50Rites Ltd.
51Thermax Ltd.
52Vesuvius India Ltd.
53Aarti Industries Ltd.
54Akzo Nobel India Ltd.
55Alkyl Amines Chemicals Ltd.
56Apcotex Industries Ltd.
57Balaji Amines Ltd.
58BASF India Ltd.
59Bhansali Engineering Polymers Ltd.
60Bharat Rasayan Ltd.
61Chambal Fertilisers & Chemicals Ltd.
62Coromandel International Ltd.
63Deepak Fertilisers & Petrochemicals Corporation Ltd.
64Dhanuka Agritech Ltd.
65Dhunseri Ventures Ltd.
66Gujarat State Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.
67Kansai Nerolac Paints Ltd.
68Nocil Ltd.
69Oriental Carbon & Chemicals Ltd.
70PI Industries Ltd.
71Privi Speciality Chemicals Ltd.
72Rallis India Ltd.
73Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizers Ltd.
74Sharda Cropchem Ltd.
75Supreme Petrochem Ltd.
76UPL Ltd.
77Vidhi Specialty Food Ingredients Ltd.
78Vinati Organics Ltd.
79Ambuja Cements Ltd.
80Century Plyboards (India) Ltd.
81Everest Industries Ltd.
82Greenply Industries Ltd.
83JK Cement Ltd.
84JK Lakshmi Cement Ltd.
85Pokarna Ltd.
86Ramco Industries Ltd.
87Shree Cement Ltd.
88Somany Ceramics Ltd.
89The Ramco Cements Ltd.
90Ultratech Cement Ltd.
91Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd.
92KDDL Ltd.
93Symphony Ltd.
94Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd.
95Indian Oil Corporation Ltd.
96Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.
97Oricon Enterprises Ltd.
98Reliance Industries Ltd.
99Rajesh Exports Ltd.
100Titan Company Ltd.
101Birla Corporation Ltd.
102Century Textiles & Industries Ltd.
103DCM Shriram Ltd.
104SRF Ltd.
105Surya Roshni Ltd.
106Texmaco Infrastructure & Holdings Ltd.
107Centum Electronics Ltd.
108Maithan Alloys Ltd.
109Avanti Feeds Ltd.
110AVT Natural Products Ltd.
111Bajaj Consumer Care Ltd.
112Britannia Industries Ltd.
113Emami Ltd.
114Galaxy Surfactants Ltd.
115Gillette India Ltd.
116Godfrey Phillips India Ltd.
117Hatsun Agro Products Ltd.
118Heritage Foods Ltd.
119Hindustan Unilever Ltd.
120Jyothy Labs Ltd.
121KRBL Ltd.
122Marico Ltd.
123Mirza International Ltd.
124Relaxo Footwears Ltd.
125Tasty Bite Eatables Ltd.
126Tata Consumer Products Ltd.
127VST Industries Ltd.
128Mahanagar Gas Ltd.
129Aarti Drugs Ltd.
130Alembic Ltd.
131Alembic Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
132Aurobindo Pharma Ltd.
133Caplin Point Laboratories Ltd.
134Cipla Ltd.
135Divis Laboratories Ltd.
136Dr. Lal Pathlabs Ltd.
137Hester Biosciences Ltd.
138Hikal Ltd.
139Jubilant Pharmova Ltd.
140Lupin Ltd.
141Natco Pharma Ltd.
142Nectar Lifesciences Ltd.
143Pfizer Ltd.
144Piramal Enterprises Ltd.
145RPG Life Sciences Ltd.
146SMS Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
147Strides Pharma Science Ltd.
148Torrent Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
149Indraprastha Gas Ltd.
150GE Power India Ltd.
151Indian Hume Pipe Company Ltd.
152Ircon International Ltd.
153J Kumar Infraproject Ltd.
154KEC International Ltd.
155KNR Construction Ltd.
156Larsen & Toubro Ltd.
157Power Mech Projects Ltd.
158Vindhya Telelinks Ltd.
159Maharashtra Seamless Ltd.
160Sarda Energy & Minerals Ltd.
161Tata Steel Ltd.
162Tinplate Company Of India Ltd.
163Welspun Corp Ltd.
164Accelya Solutions India Ltd.
165Aptech Ltd.
166Cyient Ltd.
167eClerx Services Ltd.
168Hinduja Global Solutions Ltd.
169Info Edge (India) Ltd.
170Infosys Ltd.
171Larsen & Toubro Infotech Ltd.
172Mastek Ltd.
173Mphasis Ltd.
174Nucleus Software Exports Ltd.
175Persistent Systems Ltd.
176Quick Heal Technologies Ltd.
177Sasken Technologies Ltd.
178Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Ltd.
179Gateway Distriparks Ltd.
180DB Corp Ltd.
181Entertainment Network (India) Ltd.
182NXT Digital Ltd.
183Sandesh Ltd.
184Saregama India Ltd.
185Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd.
186Coal India Ltd.
187Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation Ltd.
188NMDC Ltd.
189Gravita India Ltd.
190Hindustan Zinc Ltd.
191National Aluminium Company Ltd.
192Seshasayee Paper & Boards Ltd.
193Tamil Nadu Newsprint & Papers Ltd.
194Astral Ltd.
195Cosmo Films Ltd.
196EPL Ltd.
197Mold-Tek Packaging Ltd.
198Polyplex Corporation Ltd.
199Time Technoplast Ltd.
200NTPC Ltd.
201SJVN Ltd.
202Tata Power Company Ltd.
203Torrent Power Ltd.
204Care Ratings Ltd.
205DLF Ltd.
206JMC Projects (India) Ltd.
207PSP Projects Ltd.
208Sobha Ltd.
209Sunteck Realty Ltd.
210Cochin Shipyard Ltd.
211Bombay Dyeing & Manufacturing Company Ltd.
212Himatsingka Seide Ltd.
213Jindal Worldwide Ltd.
214Kewal Kiran Clothing Ltd.
215Kitex Garments Ltd.
216KPR Mill Ltd.
217Mayur Uniquoters Ltd.
218Page Industries Ltd.
219Ruby Mills Ltd.
220Swan Energy Ltd.
221Trident Ltd.
222Welspun India Ltd.
223Zodiac Clothing Company Ltd.
224Adani Enterprises Ltd.
225Gujarat Gas Ltd.
226Redington (India) Ltd.
227Sakuma Exports Ltd.
228Zuari Global Ltd.
229Monsanto India Ltd.—(Amalgamated)
230Wendt (India) Ltd.
231Bannari Amman Sugars Ltd.
232CCL Products (India) Ltd.
233Radico Khaitan Ltd.
234Amara Raja Batteries Ltd.
235Balkrishna Industries Ltd.
236Ceat Ltd.
237Cummins India Ltd.
238Fiem Industries Ltd.
239Gandhi Special Tubes Ltd.
240HBL Power Systems Ltd.
241Hero MotoCorp Ltd.
242India Nippon Electricals Ltd.
243Jay Bharat Maruti Ltd.
244JBM Auto Ltd.
245Lumax Industries Ltd.
246Maruti Suzuki India Ltd.
247Menon Bearings Ltd.
248Minda Corporation Ltd.
249Minda Industries Ltd.
250MM Forgings Ltd.
251Motherson Sumi Systems Ltd.
252Munjal Showa Ltd.
253NRB Bearings Ltd.
254Precision Camshafts Ltd.
255Rane Brake Lining Ltd.
256Savita Oil Technologies Ltd.
257Srikalahasthi Pipes Ltd.
258Subros Ltd.
259Sundaram-Clayton Ltd.
260Suprajit Engineering Ltd.
261TVS Motor Company Ltd.
262VST Tillers Tractors Ltd.
263Wheels India Ltd.
264Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd.
265Ador Welding Ltd.
266BEML Ltd.
267Bharat Dynamics Ltd.
268Elgi Equipments Ltd.
269Genus Power Infrastructures Ltd.
270Havells India Ltd.
271Hercules Hoists Ltd.
272Honda India Power Products Ltd.
273HPL Electric & Power Ltd.
274Igarashi Motors India Ltd.
275Kirloskar Industries Ltd.
276Kirloskar Oil Engines Ltd.
277Nesco Ltd.
278Praj Industries Ltd.
279Shriram Pistons & Rings Ltd.
280Siemens Ltd.
281Skipper Ltd.
282TD Power Systems Ltd.
283V-Guard Industries Ltd.
284Voltamp Transformers Ltd.
285Asian Paints Ltd.
286Atul Ltd.
287Berger Paints India Ltd.
288Bhageria Industries Ltd.
289Deepak Nitrite Ltd.
290Excel Industries Ltd.
291GHCL Ltd.
292GOCL Corporation Ltd.
293Gujarat Alkalies & Chemicals Ltd.
294Insecticides (India) Ltd.
295Manali Petrochemicals Ltd.
296Meghmani Organics Ltd.
297Navin Fluorine International Ltd.
298Pidilite Industries Ltd.
299Plastiblends India Ltd.
300Solar Industries (India) Ltd.
301Sudarshan Chemical Industries Ltd.
302Tata Chemicals Ltd.
303ACC Ltd.
304Cera Sanitaryware Ltd.
305Deccan Cements Ltd.
306HIL Ltd.
307HSIL Ltd.
308Kajaria Ceramics Ltd.
309KCP Ltd.
310La Opala RG Ltd.
311Mangalam Cement Ltd.
312Orient Cement Ltd.
313Visaka Industries Ltd.
314Blue Star Ltd.
315Control Print Ltd.
316Voltas Ltd.
317Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd.
318Oil India Ltd.
319Thangamayil Jewellery Ltd.
320Andhra Sugars Ltd.
321Balmer Lawrie & Company Ltd.
322Grasim Industries Ltd.
323Finolex Cables Ltd.
324KEI Industries Ltd.
325Precision Wires India Ltd.
326Agro Tech Foods Ltd.
327Colgate-Palmolive (India) Ltd.
328Dabur India Ltd.
329Godrej Consumer Products Ltd.
330ITC Ltd.
331LT Foods Ltd.
332Procter & Gamble Hygiene & Health Care Ltd.
333VIP Industries Ltd.
334Zydus Wellness Ltd.
335Gujarat State Petronet Ltd.
336Advanced Enzyme Technologies Ltd.
337Alkem Laboratories Ltd.
338Amrutanjan Health Care Ltd.
339Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd.
340Bliss GVS Pharma Ltd.
341Cadila Healthcare Ltd.
342Dr. Reddys Laboratories Ltd.
343Granules India Ltd.
344Gufic Biosciences Ltd.
345Indoco Remedies Ltd.
346JB Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
347Lincoln Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
348Marksans Pharma Ltd.
349Poly Medicure Ltd.
350Shalby Ltd.
351Shilpa Medicare Ltd.
352Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.
353TTK Healthcare Ltd.
354Unichem Laboratories Ltd.
355Advani Hotels & Resorts (India) Ltd.
356Wonderla Holidays Ltd.
357GAIL (India) Ltd.
358IRB Infrastructure Developers Ltd.
359Kalpataru Power Transmission Ltd.
360Man InfraConstruction Ltd.
361NCC Ltd.
362Om Infra Ltd.
363PNC Infratech Ltd.
364Reliance Industrial Infrastructure Ltd.
365Jindal Saw Ltd.
366JSW Steel Ltd.
367Mishra Dhatu Nigam Ltd.
368Ratnamani Metals & Tubes Ltd.
369Shankara Building Products Ltd.
37063 Moons Technologies Ltd.
371Birlasoft Ltd.
372HCL Technologies Ltd.
373Mindtree Ltd.
374Newgen Software Technologies Ltd.
375Onmobile Global Ltd.
376Sonata Software Ltd.
377Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.
378Tata Elxsi Ltd.
379Tech Mahindra Ltd.
380Vakrangee Ltd.
381Wipro Ltd.
382Zen Technologies Ltd.
383Zensar Technologies Ltd.
384Aegis Logistics Ltd.
385Allcargo Logistics Ltd.
386Container Corporation Of India Ltd.
387The Great Eastern Shipping Company Ltd.
388Transport Corporation Of India Ltd.
389Balaji Telefilms Ltd.
390Navneet Education Ltd.
391PVR Ltd.
392Sun TV Network Ltd.
393TV Today Network Ltd.
394MOIL Ltd.
395Delta Corp Ltd.
396Hindalco Industries Ltd.
397Vedanta Ltd.
398Orient Paper & Industries Ltd.
399Finolex Industries Ltd.
400Jai Corp Ltd.
401Jindal Poly Films Ltd.
402Nilkamal Ltd.
403Responsive Industries Ltd.
404Supreme Industries Ltd.
405Uflex Ltd.
406CESC Ltd.
407Gujarat Industries Power Company Ltd.
408India Power Corporation Ltd.
409Nava Bharat Ventures Ltd.
410NHPC Ltd.
411NLC India Ltd.
412Power Grid Corporation Of India Ltd.
413CRISIL Ltd.
414Ajmera Realty & Infra India Ltd.
415Anant Raj Ltd.
416Ashiana Housing Ltd.
417Brigade Enterprises Ltd.
418Dilip Buildcon Ltd.
419Prestige Estate Projects Ltd.
420Trent Ltd.
421Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers Ltd.
422Astra Microwave Products Ltd.
423Bharti Airtel Ltd.
424Indus Towers Ltd.
425Tata Communications Ltd.
426Century Enka Ltd.
427Ganesha Ecosphere Ltd.
428Garware Technical Fibres Ltd.
429Lakshmi Machine Works Ltd.
430Lux Industries Ltd.
431Nitin Spinners Ltd.
432Rupa & Company Ltd.
433Siyaram Silk Mills Ltd.
434Sutlej Textiles & Industries Ltd.
435Weizmann Ltd.
436India Motor Parts & Accessories Ltd.
437Sundram Fasteners Ltd.
438VenkyS (India) Ltd.
439Som Distilleries & Breweries Ltd.
440Castrol India Ltd.
441Greaves Cotton Ltd.
442Harita Seating Systems Ltd.
443Nelcast Ltd.
444Ramkrishna Forgings Ltd.
445Rane (Madras) Ltd.
446Schaeffler India Ltd.
447Setco Automotive Ltd.
448SML Isuzu Ltd.
449Steel Strips Wheels Ltd.
450Titagarh Wagons Ltd.
451Ucal Fuel Systems Ltd.
452Varroc Engineering Ltd.
453Interglobe Aviation Ltd.
454ABB India Ltd.
455Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd.
456Elecon Engineering Company Ltd.
457GE T&D India Ltd.
458KSB Ltd.
459Foseco India Ltd.
460Godrej Industries Ltd.
461Jayant Agro-Organics Ltd.
462Vikas EcoTech Ltd.
463Bajaj Electricals Ltd.
464Johnson Controls—Hitachi Air Conditioning India Ltd.
465Deep Energy Resources Ltd.
466Rain Industries Ltd.
467Bhartiya International Ltd.
468DFM Foods Ltd.
469Glaxosmithkline Consumer Healthcare Ltd.—(Amalgamated)
470Vadilal Industries Ltd.
471Biocon Ltd.
472Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
473Indraprastha Medical Corporation Ltd.
474Sanofi India Ltd.
475Suven Life Sciences Ltd.
476Asian Hotels (West) Ltd.
477EIH Associated Hotels Ltd.
478EIH Ltd.
479India Tourism Development Corporation Ltd.
480Linde India Ltd.
481Petronet LNG Ltd.
482Sadbhav Engineering Ltd.
483Simplex Infrastructures Ltd.
484APL Apollo Tubes Ltd.
485Gallantt Ispat Ltd.
486Tata Steel Long Products Ltd.
487Genesys International Corporation Ltd.
488Hexaware Technologies Ltd.
489Take Solutions Ltd.
490Blue Dart Express Ltd.
491GATI Ltd.
492HT Media Ltd.
493Shemaroo Entertainment Ltd.
494Crest Ventures Ltd.
495Huhtamaki India Ltd.
496Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd.
497Kolte Patil Developers Ltd.
498Mahindra Lifespace Developers Ltd.
499Oberoi Realty Ltd.
500Omaxe Ltd.
501Phoenix Mills Ltd.
502Puravankara Ltd.
503Future Lifestyle Fashions Ltd.
504Shoppers Stop Ltd.
505V-Mart Retail Ltd.
506Arvind Ltd.
507Raymond Ltd.
508Vardhman Textiles Ltd.
509MMTC Ltd.

Appendix B. Regular Payer Firms

6GM Breweries Ltd.
7United Breweries Ltd.
12Bajaj Auto Ltd.
18GP Petroleums Ltd.
74Sharda Cropchem Ltd.
75Supreme Petrochem Ltd.
136Dr. Lal Pathlabs Ltd.
146SMS Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
153J Kumar Infraproject Ltd.
163Welspun Corp Ltd.
212Himatsingka Seide Ltd.
213Jindal Worldwide Ltd.
227Sakuma Exports Ltd.
232CCL Products (India) Ltd.
233Radico Khaitan Ltd.
240HBL Power Systems Ltd.
247Menon Bearings Ltd.
250MM Forgings Ltd.
273HPL Electric & Power Ltd.
274Igarashi Motors India Ltd.
279Shriram Pistons & Rings Ltd.
283V-Guard Industries Ltd.
295Manali Petrochemicals Ltd.
300Solar Industries (India) Ltd.
313Visaka Industries Ltd.
319Thangamayil Jewellery Ltd.
324KEI Industries Ltd.
336Advanced Enzyme Technologies Ltd.
338Amrutanjan Health Care Ltd.
344Gufic Biosciences Ltd.
347Lincoln Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
358IRB Infrastructure Developers Ltd.
371Birlasoft Ltd.
375Onmobile Global Ltd.
384Aegis Logistics Ltd.
400Jai Corp Ltd.
401Jindal Poly Films Ltd.
403Responsive Industries Ltd.
405Uflex Ltd.
410NHPC Ltd.
414Ajmera Realty & Infra India Ltd.
417Brigade Enterprises Ltd.
421Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers Ltd.
427Ganesha Ecosphere Ltd.
430Lux Industries Ltd.
431Nitin Spinners Ltd.
432Rupa & Company Ltd.
434Sutlej Textiles & Industries Ltd.
435Weizmann Ltd.
438VenkyS (India) Ltd.
439Som Distilleries & Breweries Ltd.
452Varroc Engineering Ltd.
462Vikas EcoTech Ltd.
464Johnson Controls—Hitachi Air Conditioning India Ltd.
465Deep Energy Resources Ltd.
467Bhartiya International Ltd.
468DFM Foods Ltd.
482Sadbhav Engineering Ltd.
494HT Media Ltd.
495Shemaroo Entertainment Ltd.
498Jain Irrigation Systems Ltd.
501Oberoi Realty Ltd.
502Omaxe Ltd.
505Future Lifestyle Fashions Ltd.
506Shoppers Stop Ltd.

Appendix C. Result of Factor Analysis Used for Extracting the Dependent Variables for the Study

Components
Factors1. Profitability2. Firm Size3. Book Value4.Cash Flows5.Investment Opportunity and Growth Rate6. Leverage7.Operating Profit8. Tax Rate
ShareholdersFunds0.933
Networth0.931
EBITDA0.898
Netsales0.767
Interest0.746
EAT0.731 0.444
LogTA0.3750.894
LogNetworth0.3670.879
LogSales0.3330.840
LogMcap 0.834 0.327
BVS 0.972
AdjBVS 0.972
EPS 0.644 0.441
Currentratio 0.635 0.381
C.F. −0.889
FCF −0.810−0.354
NetCA −0.537 0.603
LagDiv 0.588
ROTA 0.811
MBVratio 0.776
Debtequity 0.943
ROE 0.5060.769
EBITDAmargin 0.857
Taxrate 0.942
IntCovergae 0.313
Extraction Method: Principal Component Analysis. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization. Rotation converged in 7 iterations.

Appendix D. Segregated Year-Wise Regression Results of Dividend Payout Determinants

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
ModelBStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta BStd. ErrorBeta
(Constant)−116.4631.01 ***−68.7834.68 **−84.1741.63 **77.3848.98 −20.659.9 −46.5296.94 −404.66114.05 ***
BVS0.060.010.1***0.010.010.02 0.010.010.02 0.050.020.04 0.070.020.07***0.280.040.2*** 0.20.090.05**
CF000.11***000.19***000.01 000.13***000.23***000.36***000.05
Debtequity36.167.150.05***−29.1910.17−0.04***−14.6910.59−0.02 −7.510.84−0.01 −3.957.02−0.01 −3.134.19−0.02 −72.0632.94−0.05**
EBITDA00.01−0.03 00.01−0.04 −0.010.01−0.08 −0.010−0.05 000.01 00.01−0.04 −0.010.01−0.06
FCF−3.560.09−0.94***−3.150.1−0.81***−2.730.09−0.69***−3.280.1−0.76***−2.550.13−0.57***−5.250.21−1.18***−404.6413.81−0.9***
MBVratio0.520.960.01 2.771.490.03 1.711.610.02 −5.451.84−0.05***3.012.110.03 2.553.590.02 7.463.010.06**
ROTA48.7775.540.01 −137.284.98−0.03 −254.5494.62−0.05***−418.3899.95−0.08***−452.85135.95−0.08***−881.26222.82−0.11***−329.33165.43−0.05**
Networth000.02 000.03 000.07 000.05 000 000 00−0.02
Taxrate1.872.430.01 3.2722.010 −0.591.950 0.442.440 −1.7541.520 7.6910.140.02 −0.6925.130
LogTA18.53.890.06***19.514.230.08***21.195.130.07***4.26.050.01 10.986.980.03 26.6411.850.06**72.2113.70.17***
EBITDAR−4.93.11−0.02 −4.251.52−0.04***−4.323.7−0.02 −12.5212.98−0.02 −14.0310.95−0.02 −126.0331.15−0.12***0.845.880
LagDiv0.150.020.13***0.240.020.31***0.40.020.35***0.420.020.39***0.630.030.59***00.030 0.080.030.07***
R Square0.961 0.925 0.92 0.905 0.87 0.804 0.846
N508 507 507 507 504 451 331
*** Significant at 1%;** Significant at 5%. the red color indicates negative values.

Notes

1
2
3
4

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Figure 1. Share of client participation in the capital market at National Stock Exchange (NSE) India.
Figure 1. Share of client participation in the capital market at National Stock Exchange (NSE) India.
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Figure 2. Changing pattern of Indian corporate payout since 2015.
Figure 2. Changing pattern of Indian corporate payout since 2015.
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Table 1. Independent variables used in the study.
Table 1. Independent variables used in the study.
VariablesUnderlying TheoriesProxy MeasuresFormulaReferencesFactor Loadings
ProfitabilityStudies by (Lintner 1956; Fama and French 2001); Residual dividend theory; Modigliani Irrelevance theory (Miller and Modigliani 1961); Walter Theory (Walter 1963); Gordon Theory (Gordon 1959)EBITDAEarnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization(Jiraporn and Chintrakarn 2009; Edgerton 2013)0.898
EBITDAMarginEBITDA margin = EBITDA/Net sales0.847
ROTAReturn on total assets = EBIT/Total assets(Labhane and Mahakud 2018; Fama and French 2001)
LiquidityFree cash flow theory signaling (Lang and Litzenberger 1989)C.F.Cash flows = EBITDA Interest Taxes Dividend paid(Dewasiri et al. 2019; Labhane and Das 2015)0.889
FCFFree cash flows = Cashflows*(1/Total Assets)(Dewasiri et al. 2019; Lang and Litzenberger 1989; Suliman Al-Fasfus 2020)0.810
LeverageResidual theory (Lintner 1956; Baker and Weigand 2015)Debt-equityDebt–equity ratio = Total debt/Total equity(Singla and Samanta 2019; Dewasiri et al. 2019; Banerjee and De 2015; Danil et al. 2020)0.943
Size/tangibilityAgency theory; studies by (Endri and Fathony 2020; Lumapow and Tumiwa 2017)LogTANatural log of total assets(Dewasiri et al. 2019; Le et al. 2019)0.894
Networth
BVS
Net worth
Book value per share
(Jiang and Stark 2013)0.972
Growth rateWalter theory (Walter 1963; Ismail et al. 2018)ROTAEBITDA/TA(Jensen et al. 2010)0.811
MBVMarket-to-book value ratio = Market capitalization/Net worth(Labhane 2019b; Smith and Watts 1992; Benavides et al. 2016; Walter 1963; Lahiri and Chakraborty 2014)0.776
Tax rateClientele effect (Blouin et al. 2011; Allen et al. 2000)TaxProvision for tax/Profit before tax(Labhane 2019a; Allen et al. 2000; Blouin et al. 2011; Ismail et al. 2018)0.947
Dividend premiumCatering theory (Baker and Wurgler 2004; Bilel and Mondher 2021)MBVMarket capitalization/Net worth(Baker and Wurgler 2004; Labhane 2019a; Stern and Willett 2019)
Lag dividendSignaling theory (Labhane 2018; Wu 2018)LagDivLagDiv = DivPert−1(Dewasiri et al. 2019; Dinh and Yen 2018; Qamar et al. 2014; Baker et al. 2019; DeAngelo et al. 2006)
Table 2. Results of paired sample t-test of dividend payouts and dividend yield for the years 2021, 2020 vis-à-vis pre 2020.
Table 2. Results of paired sample t-test of dividend payouts and dividend yield for the years 2021, 2020 vis-à-vis pre 2020.
Paired DifferencestdfSig. (2-Tailed)
PairsMeanStd. DeviationStd. Error Mean95% Confidence Interval of the Difference
LowerUpper
DivPer21–DivPer2029.06896.3248.33−66.00124.110.60343
DivPer21–Pre2020DivPer87.87529.8628.2032.40143.333.12352***
DivPer20–Pre2020DivPer72.05707.0733.266.69137.412.17451**
DivY21–DivY20−1.213.710.16−1.54−0.89−7.37507***
DivY21–Pre2020DivY−0.041.790.08−0.200.12−0.50471
DivY20–Pre2020DivY1.173.560.160.851.497.13470***
*** Significant at 1%; ** Significant at 5%. DivPer21 = Dividend payout for the year 2021; DivPer20 = Dividend payout for the year 2020; Pre2020DivPer = Average payout from 2015 to 2019; DivY21 = Dividend yield for the year 2021; DivY20 = Dividend yield for the year 2020; Pre2020DivY = Average yield of 2015 to 2019.
Table 3. Trend of changes in the dividend payout.
Table 3. Trend of changes in the dividend payout.
IncreaseDecreaseStableOmissionDividend Cut% (Omission + Decrease)
Consistent payers post 2015 (65)
Year 2021149152755.38%
Year 2020133311878.46%
Changes in payouts 2021
Payers 2020 (244)68112135148.77%
Payers 2019 (281)9654419066.19%
Payers 2018 (277)64654510360.29%
Payers 2017 (415)143935512464.34%
Payers 2016 (410)142885512565.12%
Payers 2015 (419)140876013264.92%
Changes in payouts 2020
Payers 2019 (281)10614023349.47%
Payers 2018 (277)11411554356.68%
Payers 2017 (415)18917474556.39%
Payers 2016 (410)18417094756.34%
Payers 2015 (419)18817584856.32%
Changes in payouts 2019
Payers 2018 (277)9716119058.12%
Payers 2017 (415)18419338046.51%
Payers 2016 (410)19218632045.37%
Payers 2015 (419)20217938042.72%
Changes in payouts 2018
Payers 2017 (415)21219211046.27%
Payers 2016 (410)21418412044.88%
Payers 2015 (419)21719210045.82%
Changes in payouts 2017
Payers 2016 (410)19877135018.78%
Payers 2015 (419)19974146017.66%
Changes in payouts 2016
Payers 2015 (419)20871140016.95%
Consistent payers represent the sample firms with increasing or stable dividends from 2015 to 2019. Payers represents the firms that have paid increasing or stable dividends in the suffix year.
Table 4. Pattern of dividend cuts 2015 onwards.
Table 4. Pattern of dividend cuts 2015 onwards.
YearsNumber of Firms%Change in Dividend–Cut Percentage
MinimumMaximumMeanStd. DeviationVariance
202116432.22%−0.99−0.04−0.650.270.70
202028055.00%−1.00−0.07−0.740.270.07
201922844.80%−1.00−0.04−0.640.270.07
201823245.60%−0.99−0.02−0.680.250.06
20179418.50%−0.91−0.02−0.450.230.05
20169919.40%−0.97−0.04−0.390.240.06
20159017.70%−0.97−0.01−0.390.240.06
Table 5. Dividend cut trends (2015) onwards across sectors.
Table 5. Dividend cut trends (2015) onwards across sectors.
IndustryNumber of CompaniesDividend Cuts
2021202020192018201720162015
Manufacturing298157134135137575350
Service sector10857634745272721
FMCG3219121820246
Infrastructure1811986512
Realty17101156264
Diversified953661-2
Trading94324-4-
Agri73323-22
Diamond & Jewellery32111-1-
Electricals42311--1
Aviation21212--1
Miscellaneous2112----
Total509272245228231949889
DivCut% 53%48%45%45%18%19%17%
Table 6. Determinants of dividend payouts.
Table 6. Determinants of dividend payouts.
VariableCoefficientStd. ErrorSignificance
C−282.1254.864***
EBITDA−0.0040.002*
LOGTA44.5586.89***
BVS0.0760.046*
CFS−0.0010.001
FCFS−2.8070.346***
MBVRATIO10.9734.061***
DEBTEQUITY−4.2633.319
EBITDAMARGIN−5.6921.559***
TAXRATE0.4790.568
LAGDIV0.0920.035***
Effects Specification
Cross-section fixed (dummy variables)
Root MSE254.141R-Squared0.75
Mean dependent var.209.583Adj. R-Squared0.71
S.D. dependent var.508.104S.E. of regression274.95
Akaike into criterion14.205Sum squared resid230,125,535.8
Schwarz criterion15.205Log likelihood−24,787.18
Hannan–Quinn criterion14.526F-statistic17.61
Durbin–Watson stat.1.913Prob(F-statistic)0
Dependent Variable: DIVPER
Method: Panel Least Squares
Sample 2015–2021
Periods included: 7
Cross-sections included: 509
Total panel (balanced) observations: 3563
White period standard errors & covariance (d.f. corrected)
*** Significant at 1%; * Significant at 10%.
Table 7. Determinants of dividend payout of regular dividend payers.
Table 7. Determinants of dividend payout of regular dividend payers.
VariableCoefficientStd. ErrorSig.
C114.31186.793
EBITDA0.0060.006
LOGTA−8.93914.81
BVS0.0360.023
CFS0.0040.001***
FCFS−294.114134.497**
MBVRATIO−0.1560.121
DEBTEQUITY−19.68111.395*
EBITDAMARGIN−23.26513.185*
TAXRATE−18.859−18.954
LAGDIV0.6720.265**
Effects Specification
Cross-section fixed (dummy variables)
Root MSE99.342R-Squared0.956
Mean dependent var.172.501Adj. R-Squared0.946
S.D dependent var.472.029S.E. of regression109.841
Akaike into criterion12.399Sum squared resid4,065,918.282
Schwarz criterion13.131Log likelihood−2479.211
Hannan–Quinn criter.12.689F-statistic98.016
Durbin–Watson stat.2.285Prob(F-statistic)0
Dependent Variable: DIVPER
Method: Panel Least Squares
Sample 2015–2021
Periods included: 7
Cross-sections included: 65
Total panel (balanced) observations: 412
White period standard errors & covariance (d.f. corrected)
*** Significant at 1%; ** Significant at 5%; * Significant at 10%.
Table 8. Determinants of changing payouts (results of panel regression with cross-section-fixed and panel-clustered heteroskedasticity).
Table 8. Determinants of changing payouts (results of panel regression with cross-section-fixed and panel-clustered heteroskedasticity).
All FirmsRegular Payers
VariableCoefficientStd. ErrorSig.CoefficientStd. ErrorSig.
C −290.68662.049***223.549210.142
DUMMY202044.16716.95***20.93822.475**
DUMMY202149.71727.817*−35.07617.433***
FCFS−3.2360.228***−541.84290.132
EBITDAMARGIN−6.0652.577**33.17633.437
ROTA231.836179.373 −538.501406.11
LOGTA45.8312.061***−51.48551.005
LOGMCAP−7.634.753 10.9125.094**
LOGSALES5.6937.891 40.63636.002
MBVRATIO8.6854.184**−0.0650.092
DEBTEQUITY−4.123.094 −56.92830.335*
Effects Specification
Cross-section fixed (dummy variables)
Root MSE 258.320 173.823
Mean dependent var. 209.583 172.495
S.D. dependent var. 508.104 471.456
Akaike into criterion 14.238 13.517
Schwarz criterion 15.138 14.248
Hannan–Quinn criter. 14.558 13.806
Durbin–Watson stat. 1.878 2.628
R-Squared 0.741 0.864
Adj. R-Squared 0.697 0.834
S.E.of regression 279.475 192.143
Sum squared resid 237,755,377.389 12,487,548.679
Log likelihood −24,845.283 −2716.291
F-statistic 16.853 28.952
Prob(F-statistic) 0.000 0.000
Cross-sections included 509 65
Total panel (balanced) observations: 3563 413
Dependent Variable: DIVPER
Method: Panel Least Squares
Sample 2015–2021
Periods included: 7
White period standard errors & covariance (d.f. corrected)
*** Significant at 1%; ** Significant at 5%; * Significant at 10%.
Table 9. Predictors estimates for dividend cuts.
Table 9. Predictors estimates for dividend cuts.
All FirmsRegular Payers
VariableCoefficientStd. Error CoefficientStd. Error
C 1.1770.063***0.0790.115
DUMMY20200.0150.026 0.7980.055***
DUMMY20210.0370.046 0.5480.069***
FCFS0.0000.000**0.0390.028
EBITDAMARGIN0.0040.005 0.0290.018
ROTA−1.410.179***−0.2370.345
LOGTA−0.0330.015**−0.0360.025
LOGMCAP−0.0120.006*0.0040.007
LOGSALES−0.0170.013 0.0260.02
MBVRATIO−0.0050.002*0.0000.001
DEBTEQUITY0.0080.005 0.0170.029
Effects Specification
Cross-section fixed (dummy variables)
Root MSE0.450 0.229
Mean dependent var.0.524 0.191
S.D. dependent var.0.499 0.394
Akaike into criterion1.531 0.215
Schwarz criterion2.431 0.894
Hannan–Quinn criter.1.852 0.483
Durbin–Watson stat.2.354 2.182
R-Squared0.189 0.662
Adj. R-Squared0.051 0.597
S.E. of regression0.487 0.250
Sum squared resid720.517 23.760
Log likelihood−2208.147 26.032
F-statistic1.372 10.073
Prob(F-statistic)0.000 0.000
Cross-sections included509 65
Total panel (balanced) observations: 3563 455
Dependent Variable: DIVCUT
Method: Panel Least Squares
Sample: 2015–2021
Periods included: 7
White period standard errors & covariance (d.f. corrected)
*** Significant at 1%; ** Significant at 5%; * Significant at 10%.
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Agrawal, A. Impact of Elimination of Dividend Distribution Tax on Indian Corporate Firms Amid COVID Disruptions. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090413

AMA Style

Agrawal A. Impact of Elimination of Dividend Distribution Tax on Indian Corporate Firms Amid COVID Disruptions. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(9):413. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090413

Chicago/Turabian Style

Agrawal, Anshu. 2021. "Impact of Elimination of Dividend Distribution Tax on Indian Corporate Firms Amid COVID Disruptions" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 9: 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090413

APA Style

Agrawal, A. (2021). Impact of Elimination of Dividend Distribution Tax on Indian Corporate Firms Amid COVID Disruptions. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(9), 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090413

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