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Could Expedia Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:EXPE) be an attractive dividend share to own for the long haul? Investors are often...
Online travel services provider Expedia is to pay a special dividend in December, the company announced in a statement. The payout of $0.52 per share of common stock is payable to shareholders of ...
The clientele effect is the idea that the set of investors attracted to a particular kind of security will affect the price of the security when policies or circumstances change. For instance, some investors want a company that doesn't pay dividends but instead invests that money in growing the business, whereas other investors prefer a stock ...
A prominent example of a special dividend was the $3 dividend announced by Microsoft in 2004, to partially relieve its balance sheet of a large cash balance. [1] A more recent example of a special dividend is the $1 dividend announced by SAIC (U.S. company) in 2013, just prior to it splitting off its solutions business into a new company named ...
Yes, good news can change the bid and ask price by more than the dividend. But this is rare in the case of the preferred stocks I'm emphasizing. So these preferreds are the best test case to demonstrate what I'm talking about, and isolate this ex-dividend effect from others. I've often observed the automatic drop on the ex-dividend date.
In January 2011, Travelscape, a subsidiary of Expedia Inc. based in the Las Vegas Valley, was ordered to pay $6.3 million in back sales taxes to South Carolina by the South Carolina Supreme Court. Travelscape argued that South Carolina's efforts to tax online retailers located out-of-state violate the Dormant Commerce Clause. In a unanimous ...