> However, paying dividends is a taxable event, which means shareholders don't like it.
Shareholders love dividends because it is taxed as capital gains ( long-term capital gains if you own the stock longer than 1 year ). It's why most of the publicly listed stock ( of profitable companies ) pay dividends - because shareholders want dividends. Apple was forced to pay dividends by investors. So was Meta. As was Alphabet. All under shareholder pressure because dividends get tax as capital gains. Any company sitting on a pile of cash will get pressure to pay it out as dividends by shareholders.
Hm. Not quite right. Regular shareholders don't like dividends. It means you have an immediate tax liability so you are paying taxes twice. The company paid taxes, and now you have to pay taxes. Then that money has to be invested elsewhere eventually incurring another tax event.
It's much better to have the company buy shares back. That way the stock price goes up. You then only face the tax event once you sell the stock later in the future. So you just avoided a tax event.
The reason for dividends is that pension funds and the like do like dividends for whatever reasons.
Individual investors and people who have a long term approach like Warren Buffet are against dividends.
Shareholders love dividends because it is taxed as capital gains ( long-term capital gains if you own the stock longer than 1 year ). It's why most of the publicly listed stock ( of profitable companies ) pay dividends - because shareholders want dividends. Apple was forced to pay dividends by investors. So was Meta. As was Alphabet. All under shareholder pressure because dividends get tax as capital gains. Any company sitting on a pile of cash will get pressure to pay it out as dividends by shareholders.