Disaggregation and Dividend cover: Difference between pages

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''Accounting concepts.'' 
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders (earnings) ÷ Dividends.


1.


The accounting principle that relevant assets and liabilities should normally be reported separately at their gross amounts, rather than being netted off.
Dividend cover measures the safety or sustainability of the future dividend flow, from the perspective of the investor.


The greater the cover ratio, the greater the assumed likelihood that the firm paying the dividend will continue to be able to pay it in the future.


2.  
In the situation where the cover ratio falls below 1.0, the dividend is said to be ''uncovered'' and it will not be sustainable at its previous level unless there is a recovery in the firm's profits.


The closely related - but broader - accounting principle that important relevant amounts should be disclosed separately, rather than only being reported as a total (aggregated) figure.
 
Also known as the dividend cover ratio.
 
 
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example 1'''</span>
 
GeeCo's profits attributable to ordinary shareholders (earnings) are £600m.
 
Its dividends for the same period are £200m.
 
 
The dividend cover is:
 
600 / 200
 
= 3 times
 
 
'''Alternative calculation'''
 
Dividend cover can also be calculated on a per-share basis, producing exactly the same result, as:
 
Dividend cover = EPS / DPS
 
 
''Where:''
 
EPS = earnings per share
 
DPS = dividends per share
 
 
<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example 2'''</span>
 
GeeCo's earnings per share were 12p.
 
Its dividends per share for the same period were 4p.
 
 
The dividend cover was:
 
12 / 4
 
= 3 times




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Accounting concepts]]
* [[Cover ratio]]
* [[Accruals concept]]
* [[Dividend yield]]
* [[Assets]]
* [[Dividend]]
* [[Consistency]]
* [[DPS]]
* [[Going concern]]
* [[Earnings]]
* [[Liabilities]]
* [[Earnings per share]]
* [[Prudence]]
* [[Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]

Revision as of 16:02, 3 February 2019

Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders (earnings) ÷ Dividends.


Dividend cover measures the safety or sustainability of the future dividend flow, from the perspective of the investor.

The greater the cover ratio, the greater the assumed likelihood that the firm paying the dividend will continue to be able to pay it in the future.

In the situation where the cover ratio falls below 1.0, the dividend is said to be uncovered and it will not be sustainable at its previous level unless there is a recovery in the firm's profits.


Also known as the dividend cover ratio.


Example 1

GeeCo's profits attributable to ordinary shareholders (earnings) are £600m.

Its dividends for the same period are £200m.


The dividend cover is:

600 / 200

= 3 times


Alternative calculation

Dividend cover can also be calculated on a per-share basis, producing exactly the same result, as:

Dividend cover = EPS / DPS


Where:

EPS = earnings per share

DPS = dividends per share


Example 2

GeeCo's earnings per share were 12p.

Its dividends per share for the same period were 4p.


The dividend cover was:

12 / 4

= 3 times


See also