bigdog
Retired many years ago
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- 19 July 2006
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I hold ANZ shares and the final dividend is paid on the first workday in July each year.
I have changed accountants this year for the preparation of my SMSF accounts
My previous accountant included the ANZ dividend paid on July 1 2013 in my 2013 accounts.
Paid 01/07/2013
Record Date 15/05/2013
Sundry debtor accrued for the dividend amount
My accountant preparing my 2014 accounts has told me that the ANZ dividend paid on July 1 2014 should not be included in 2014 SMSF accounts!
I could not specific internet links for dividend paid in July with prior accounting year record date!
What is the correct treatment and can you please advise links
Hi everyone,
Not even a single share of anz was traded today. It seems that trading was closed in in this share today.
Does anyone know the reason for this ??
I haven't heard of this before. Whole of the market was traded and only one stock not traded.
Thanks
Dunno but I'm really shyty about it.wow, you reckon retail investors going to take up the offer? i wonder what price the institutional investors bought in for
is this good for shareholders in long term?
Dunno but I'm really shyty about it.
Seems to have brought all the banks down.
I've taken it as an opportunity to top up on ANZ and WBC.
The institutional Investers have already taken 2.5 Bil so ANZ does not really need the Retail investors take it all up.
If I am right the SP should be around or just above the 30.95 (minus 2%) anyways.
This hit has alot of shock value priced in.
Cash profit for the quarter was also below expectations for some analysts. Too much growth priced in, I suspect.I'm not quite sure why this is shocking. APRA have been informing us about increased capital requirements for investor mortgages (i.e. increased risk weighting for those that have advanced BASEL accreditation) for months now. In fact, NAB raised capital for this reason as well, so I don't understand the surprise.
I'm not quite sure why this is shocking.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/re...property-tycoons/story-fni0cly6-1227446517160“I only buy in areas I think are undervalued, but will see price growth soon. After the value of my properties grows, I take out the equity to purchase more,” Mr Fleming said.
The next question, aside from which bank is next, is... if the economy keeps slowing down, will they need to raise even more capital?
Neither am I. And watch out because there's a rumour that CBA might be looking to raise up to $10b. Why wouldn't they, we're in the midst of strong lending, equity is dirt cheap for Aussie banks and who knows what the future holds, although one could take a stab in the dark.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/re...property-tycoons/story-fni0cly6-1227446517160
If a pizza boy wearing culottes can be a property whiz then we all can! What could possibly go wrong!?!
“I only buy sectors I think are undervalued, but will see price growth soon. After the value of my shares grows, I take out the equity to purchase more,”
Another opinion is that the banks could have easy funded these capital requirements from the swathes of money they will pay out in dividends before July 2016.
Of course if dividends were cut temporarily, that'd be bad for the share price. And when your executive remuneration bonuses are linked to total shareholder return (TSR) that's also bad for the people making the decision.
What is bad for the share price in the short-term in this case is almost certain to be better than diluting existing shareholders in the long-term. Surely?
PS: compare how NAB did their raising to ANZ's method. I wonder which one was better for retail holders? Pretty obvious.
Another opinion is that the banks could have easy funded these capital requirements from the swathes of money they will pay out in dividends before July 2016.
Of course if dividends were cut temporarily, that'd be bad for the share price. And when your executive remuneration bonuses are linked to total shareholder return (TSR) that's also bad for the people making the decision.
What is bad for the share price in the short-term in this case is almost certain to be better than diluting existing shareholders in the long-term. Surely?
PS: compare how NAB did their raising to ANZ's method. I wonder which one was better for retail holders? Pretty obvious.
Gross yield after dilution still >8%. A good day to buy in my opinion.
Buying based solely on yield could be the problem. Buying a bank for 1.8*Book at what could be near the top of the short term debt cycle might not pan out well. But then again, I don't know enough about banks.
Just bought another fair bit on the 4% dip just under $27.I don't know much about banks either, except that they seem to make a lot of money. Without reading into the figures, I worked out some averages of the performance of a couple of financial ratios going back to 1989, which is as far back as my data source goes. Using the end of financial year values:
Average Return on Equity: 20%
Average Price-Earnings Ratio: 12
Average Dividend Pay-out Ratio (DPS/EPS): 67%
Current ROE: 19%
Current PE: 12
Current Payout Ratio: 70%
......
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