💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 3928.gmi captured on 2023-06-14 at 16:10:40. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2012-03-19 12:03:25
Mon Mar 19, 2012 10:19am EDT
(Reuters) - Apple Inc will start paying a regular quarterly dividend of $2.65 a
share in July and buy back up to $10 billion of its stock beginning in the next
fiscal year, the world's most valuable company said on Monday.
The company expects the share buyback program to run over three years, with the
primary objective to offset the impact of employee stock options and equity
grants.
Apple's annual dividend yield will come in around 1.8 percent. That is slightly
lower than the average of 2 percent for companies in the Standard & Poor's 500
index.
"We have used some of our cash to make great investments in our business
through increased research and development, acquisitions, new retail store
openings, strategic prepayments and capital expenditures in our supply chain,
and building out our infrastructure," Apple Chief Executive Office Tim Cook
said in a statement. "You'll see more of all of these in the future."
The company will still maintain a "war chest" for other strategic
opportunities, Cook said. "These decisions will not close any doors for us."
He told analysts on a conference call that product innovation remained the
company's priority.
The maker of the iPhone, iPad and iPod has $98 billion in cash and securities,
equal to about $104 a share, according to ISI Group analyst Brian Marshall.
The company said it anticipated using about $45 billion of domestic cash in the
first three years of its buyback and dividend programs.
When asked about Apple's substantial cash parked overseas, Chief Financial
Official Peter Oppenheimer said the company had no plans to repatriate it at
this time.
"We think that the current tax laws provide a considerable economic
disincentive to U.S. companies that might otherwise repatriate the substantial
amount of foreign cash that they have," he said. "That's our view. And we've
expressed it. "
Apple last paid a dividend in 1995, according to Thomson Reuters data. In 1996,
the company posted a net loss of $816 million. "Apple is an overcapitalized
company, and it's probably better to have the cash in the shareholders' pockets
than in Apple's pockets," said John Strand, CEO of Copenhagen-based Strand
Consulting.
Apple shares were up 1.7 percent at $595.84 on Nasdaq after being halted
earlier in the morning.
"For a lot of people who own this stock," said BGC Partners analyst Colin
Gillis, "some dividend is better than no dividend."
(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke in New York and Poornima Gupta in San Francisco;
Additional reporting by Tarmo Virki in Helsinki and Sinead Carew in New York;
Editing by John Wallace and Lisa Von Ahn)