Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Microsoft raises dividend, authorises more debt

SEATTLE: Microsoft Corp raised its quarterly dividend by 23% to 16 US cents (49 sen) per share on Tuesday, Sept 21, its first increase in two years, marking the latest move by a TECHNOLOGY [] company to return cash to shareholders frustrated by stagnant share prices.

The world's largest software company, whose stock is trading at the same level it was eight years ago, has been under pressure to distribute more of the US$37 billion of cash on its balance sheet.

"It is an anticlimax, but a step in the right direction," said Bill Smead at Smead Capital Management, a Microsoft shareholder who has agitated for the company to give more money back to shareholders.

Other cash-rich tech companies have felt similar pressure. Oracle Corp started paying dividends last year and Cisco Systems Inc said last week it would start paying dividends this fiscal year.

The chief executive of Xerox Corp said in an interview on cable channel CNBC on Tuesday that the company would look at raising its dividend next year.

A regular dividend is generally regarded as a mark of a mature company that cannot match earlier growth rates or stock gains, and tends to attract more conservative investors. It is the antithesis of what many tech companies aspire to in their early years.

Several of Microsoft's peers have paid dividends for many years, but Intel Corp and International Business Machines Corp (IBM) have increased payouts dramatically over the past 10 years. Hewlett-Packard Co (HP) has held its dividend unchanged since 1998.

The holdouts are Apple Inc, which used to pay dividends but stopped in 1995, and Google Inc, which has never paid a dividend and says it doesn't plan to.

With about 8.65 billion shares outstanding, Microsoft is set to pay out about US$5.5 billion in dividends per year at the new rate.

A quarterly dividend of 16 US cents per share gives Microsoft an annual dividend yield of about 2.5%. That puts it 12th in the Nasdaq 100 by dividend yield and 138th in the Standard & Poor's 500, according to Reuters data.

Its shares were up 19 US cents in after-hours trading after closing at US$25.15 on Nasdaq. They are down 17% this year, compared with a 3.5% gain in the Nasdaq.

Microsoft, which went public in 1986, started paying an annual dividend in 2003. The following year it issued a special dividend of US$3 per share ' shelling out more than US$30 billion in one go ' and started a quarterly dividend of eight US cents per share. It raised the quarterly dividend regularly until its last increase to 13 US cents per share in September 2008.

The Redmond, Washington-based company also said on Tuesday its board authorised it to issue up to US$6 billion in additional debt, which could be used for paying dividends or buying back stock.

Two years ago the board authorised US$6 billion in debt, which the company used by selling US$3.75 billion in long-term corporate bonds, US$1.25 billion in convertible bonds and US$1 billion in short-term commercial borrowings.

Most of Microsoft's abundant cash is overseas, which makes it cost-effective for the company to take on cheap debt rather than pay taxes on repatriated cash.

Microsoft, which says it has returned nearly US$170 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases over the past 10 years, made no new plans for share buybacks. It said it still has about US$23.7 billion left of the US$40 billion share repurchase authorisation the board granted two years ago.

The new dividend is payable Dec 9 to shareholders of record on Nov 18. ' Reuters


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