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Dividends are paid to share holders based on ownership of shares before the “ex-dividends” date.

Example:

Stock A has an ex-date of July 1st

Stock B has an ex-date of July 15th

Stock C has an ex-date of August 1st

Is it legal to buys Stock A on June 30th, sells it on July 2nd, then buy Stock B on July 14th, sells it on July 16th, then buys Stock C on July 30th, sells it on August 2nd... and continues this process to “mine” dividend payouts?

Is this a strategy that is used by investors? Why or why not?

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    A good rule of thumb for investing is that if you can think of a strategy that seems to 'guarantee' better results, either you're missing something in your calculation (perhaps you are missing a consideration of risk, or perhaps your math is just wrong), or your strategy would only work if no one thought of it before. If no one else had the ability to do what you are proposing, and they were too naive to consider it, they would happily sell you shares with no 'dividend premium' the day before dividend declaration, and buy them back with no 'post-dividend penalty' the next day. Commented Aug 1, 2018 at 13:42
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    This strategy is known as Dividend Capture. It's possible to profit, but not because of the cash from the dividend itself; it's because of the movement before and after the ex-date. it's just stock speculation, and the risks are commensurate with stock speculation risks. As others have said, the price of the dividend is baked in, even in options, so you're not getting free money. In other words, it's less about the dividend, and more about how you expect the market to react (recover), which really shows that this is little more than any other speculative stock strategy.
    – K_foxer9
    Commented Aug 1, 2018 at 15:29
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    If your looking for a free lunch, you aren't going to find it in something that thousands of professionals watch like a hawk. Commented Aug 1, 2018 at 16:26
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    The price of a stock accounts for the expected dividend, and immediately after issuing the dividend, its price is reduced by that amount (but usually trades back up reasonably quickly). So yes, perfectly legal, just ineffective. Commented Aug 1, 2018 at 18:05
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    @smci - Most vendors adjust historical data by the amount of the dividend. Because of this, a graph will not depict the drop in share price that occurred on the ex-dividend date. Some web sites give you the choice of a graph with adjusted data or with unadjusted data. The latter will show the gap caused by the dividend on the ex-div date. Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 15:14

9 Answers 9

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Is it legal to buys Stock A on June 30th, sells it on July 2nd, then buy Stock B on July 14th, sells it on July 16th, then buys Stock C on July 30th, sells it on August 2nd... and continues this process to “mine” dividend payouts?

Yes it is legal to do this. If a person is allowed to buy and sell shares they can do exactly this. They still have to follow any of their brokers rules and pay any applicable tax laws, but they are free to use the dividend payment schedule to guide their investment strategy.

Is this a strategy that is used by investors? Why or why not?

As mentioned above it is a strategy. Does it make sense? Not really. If the price of the stock goes down essentially equal to the dividend then the price a few days later will probably be lower than the purchase price making the transaction a loss. When factoring in any transaction fees it is even more likely to be a loss.

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  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 17:48
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    Also, people are unlikely to sell the day before the dividend for less than the value of the dividend.
    – OrangeDog
    Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 10:01
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You can buy any or all of those stocks if you have the cash (or margin) to do so. But why would you, just because they pay a dividend?

Suppose you buy stock (A) at the close today for $100 and tomorrow it pays a quarterly dividend of $1. Tomorrow's adjusted close will be $99. If there is no buying or selling pressure when trading resumes in the morning, you will only be able to sell your stock for $99, incurring a $1 capital loss. So it's a $1 loss and $1 in dividends to be received on the Payable Date. It's a wash.

To add insult to injury, if this is a non sheltered account and there are no country specific tax credits, you'll have to pay a tax on the dividend which is really just a return of your own money from your brokerage account. Now you are an investor in stock (A), hoping that it recovers to $100 so that you can break even on the stock and your $1 dividend will then become true income.

A dividend is not FREE money. If it was, no one would invest. They'd buy the stock at the close and sell first thing in the morning, repeating the process as fast as cash account trade settlement allowed or just non stop every day if in a margin account. Over the long haul, regardless of what the market did, there would be an expected profit because after all, it's FREE money. Unfortunately, easy money via Dividend Capture only occurs on the FANTEX (the Fantasy Exchange).

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There have already been good answers explaining that your strategy is neither illegal nor profitable, but no one has explained what forces the stock price to drop ex-dividend.

Dividend arbitrage. Arbitrage means (more or less) riskless profit.

Here's an unrealistic, simplified version:

Let's say there's a stock selling for $100 today. Let's say it will pay a $1 dividend in one month. And let's pretend you can enter into a forward contract to buy or sell a share on the ex-dividend date for $100. Then you should buy as many shares today as you can and enter into a forward contract to sell them ex-dividend. Then you'll buy at 100, sell at 100, and collect the dividend. Riskless profit! Many other people know this, and so they will do the same thing. This arbitrage will cause the (spot) price of the stock to rise and the forward price to fall until (not surprisingly) the difference between the two is $1.

Another simple arbitrage will cause the forward stock price on the ex-dividend date to equal the actual stock price on the ex-dividend date.

Thus, the actual stock price will drop by $1 when the dividend is paid.

This only works if your stock has a forward contract available that matures on the stock's ex-dividend date. In reality, that might not be true, but there are typically stock options of varying expirations. And it turns out that they can be used for similar purposes, although it might not be obvious at first.

As a practical matter, the size of a dividend is typically smaller than the daily volatility of the stock, so it's hard to see the drop in all the noise. But when a stock pays a large special dividend like Microsoft did in 2004, the drop can be quite noticeable.

If the technical details of this dividend arbitrage aren't clear to you, just rest assured there are plenty of people out there who know a lot more about this than you and who have a lot of resources. It's useful to keep in mind the saying: "There's a patsy in every game. If you look around and don't know who it is, it's you."

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  • There is no such thing as "more or less" riskless profit in Dividend Arbitrage. It is or it isn't. Your explanation is lacking in multiple aspects. You don't have to pretend that a forward contract exists at current price. If XYZ has options, it does. It's inaccurate to say that if you buy a $100 put for shares bought at $100 that you will collect the dividend and have a riskless profit.It is also not true that this "only works if there are forward contracts available for all stocks expiring on their ex-dividend dates." Stocks don't expire. Any and put expiring after ex-div works. Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 15:01
  • The short answer is that Dividend Arbitrage is only viable if the dividend exceeds the time premium of a long ITM put. Many web sites and blogs state that it's also true if the dividend exceeds the call's premium but that is false. There is no Dividend arb available for calls. The example in the Investopedia link that you provided is mathematically correct but it is a pie in the sky example. There is no way that one would be able to buy a $60 put for $11 on a $50 stock paying a $2 dividend. Also, for large special dividends, the terms of the option contracts are adjusted to reflect it. Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 15:08
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    @BobBaerker There is technically no such thing as riskless profit. Every trade has risk. Prices could change between buying one security and the other. Your counterparty could default. The U.S. government could even default. The "more or less" was there to insulate against the overly-pedantic users that Stack Exchange can attract who sometimes can take a simple, easy-to-understand answer and burden it with all sorts of technical complications and caveats. I could see complaints that my hypothetical example was not technically "risk free".
    – Endy
    Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 16:25
  • @BobBaerker I made the example use forward contracts because in my opinion it's easier to understand with forwards than with options. By "forward contract" I meant a contract that gives you the obligation to sell your stock on the ex-dividend date at a specified price. That is different from an option, and likely does not exist for your stock. I did not say anything about buying a $100 put.
    – Endy
    Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 16:26
  • @BobBaerker I did not mean that the stock expires on the ex-dividend date, I meant that forward contract expires then. (Technically, I should have said "matures". I've edited to rephrase that sentence.)
    – Endy
    Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 16:26
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It is perfectly legal to buy and sell a company's stock before/on/after ex-dividend dates.

In some countries, such as Australia, there exists a tax system called "Dividend Imputation". What this means is that any (previous) company tax paid (Australian company tax rate = 30%) to the Government can be "franked" against the dividend paid, such that the investor/trader receives a credit for the proportion of company tax already paid against each share. Each company is able to declare any portion of its "franking credits" already paid to the Government at its discretion.

On 1 Jul 2000 (FY2001), the Australian Taxation Office amended this rule so you had to hold the stock for at least 45 calendar days (it's a little more complex than this when it comes to hedging/derivatives).

Given we deal with Australian traders/investors, many of them ask questions about dividend stripping strategies which incorporate this technique, so it is certainly a well-used technique, at least in Australia.

For other countries that are "double taxed" such as USA, queries to us are more based around high dividend yield stocks than anything else.

In terms of what types of strategies traders/investors use and actually execute successfully - well that's the "$64,000 question"!

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I think to really help you understand why this is unlikely to work, we need to talk about the value of a stock. In finance theory, the intrinsic value of any instrument is function of is the present value of it's future cash flows. For stocks that basically means dividends.

A common approach is to use the discounted cash flow model. In a nutshell, future money is worth less than today money so you count the $1 dividend next quarter as being worth less than the $1 dividend today. Formally as shown in Investopedia:

DCF from Investopedia

Where:

CFn = Cash flows in period n.

d = Discount rate, Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)

Don't worry too much about the technicalities around d. The important thing here is the exponent on the denominator: the farther out the cashflow, the bigger the denominator and the less it counts towards the present value.

So bringing this back, the day before the ex-dividend date has a future cashflow that's not far off in the future. After that date, that dividend is no longer a future cash flow and is not part of the valuation. That is: the valuation is reduced by some amount that is relatively close to the dividend payment. It's also the case that the company's assets have been reduced but that's not really accounted for here.

I want to emphasize that it's extremely difficult to use this model for stocks that do not pay dividends and have not announced any intention to do so for the foreseeable future. Even for stocks that do pay dividends, it's impossible to know that they will continue to do so or at what level. It also requires plugging in a lot of your own assumptions / beliefs / guesses. So don't get too wrapped around the formula or think that figuring out the fair price of a stock is little more than plugging numbers into this (or some other) formula. Reality is far more complex than the model. Having said that, these models do have validity and usefulness on their own.

So the upshot is that theory tells us that if the market is efficient, you the price of the stock will drop by the reduced value of the company after the dividend payment is made and that you can't make money on such a transaction. However, if you can identify a inefficiency in the market, you could potentially make an arbitrage play and make money. However, you'd have to beat all the other market players to the punch.

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    It doesn't matter hat the theory is or whether the market is efficient or not. There is no arbitrage available. The stock exchanges reduce share price by the EXACT amount of the dividend on the ex-dividend date. It's that simple. Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 17:38
  • @BobBaerker And why do you think they do that?
    – JimmyJames
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 17:47
  • @BobBaerker You understand that the market doesn't force you to sell at that price, right? They are simply adjusting the record of the last price sold. The stock exchange doesn't set prices.
    – JimmyJames
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 18:10
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    @BobBaerker I'm not really sure why you are bringing this up. The assertion you are making seems to be completely compatible with the answer here. I'm not really interested in straw man arguments.
    – JimmyJames
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 19:09
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    @BobBaerker The historical adjustment of the previous prices has nothing to do with what happens in your brokerage account. If you sold EQT on Jul 31st at the closing price of $51.19, and parked it in cash, you still have that money. The fact that the adjusted close for that date is now $50.08 doesn't change that. You are confusing adjusted historical prices with actual market prices.
    – JimmyJames
    Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 16:35
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The short answer is yes it is legal, but won't net you any result.

The longer answer is that technically the same day a stock goes ex-dividend the share price will fall by the amount of the dividend, as such there is no way to profit. If there was an arbitrage opportunity, as you are suggesting, many would take advantage of it instantly, and it wouldn't exist any more.

Now that being said, there are examples of illiquid stocks that do not drop by the dividend when the ex-date arrives. It is possible you would be able to trade small amounts of money in these stocks and receive the dividend without losing the capital gain.

I've previously discussed these high yield dividend stocks that you could try this out on, but beware it may not be a successful strategy. Good luck!

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  • That doesn’t seem right about the stock going down the same amount. If a 30.00 share pays out 0.30 in dividends, the share does not go down 0.30. Commented Aug 7, 2018 at 20:47
  • @PV22 - Tonight, look up the close of any stocks that are going ex-dividend tomorrow and then tomorrow, check what today's close was (take tomorrow's close and adjust by tomorrow's change). You'll observe that share price has dropped by the exact amount of the dividend on the ex-dividend date, something that Jimmy, who has no idea what is happening in his brokerage account, completely fails to comprehend. There are numerous reliable web sites that verify this (Zacks, Investopedia, the NASDAQ, etc.) along with many web articles confirming the same. Commented Aug 13, 2018 at 17:00
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What everyone else said is absolutely true but the reason for the price change is not even just because investors "know" about the dividends and change their bids.

The exchanges themselves will automatically adjust buy/sell orders to reflect that dividend on the ex-dividend date (the point at which buying a stock no longer entitles you to the dividend). If I bid $10 for a stock priced at $10.05 and a $0.10 dividend goes out lowering the price to $9.95 my bid will be automatically lowered to $9.90 to reflect the reduced stock price because of the dividend.

The same is true for stock splits, stock dividends, etc. or any other action that will change the price of the stock directly.

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I'll try to explain why it's legal but not a good idea from a different approach.

Assume for a moment that it was a good idea. Guaranteed money ripe for the taking. On a given day for a stable stock there are X buyers and X sellers. Well, now you have X+1 sellers. In order to equalize the number of buyers and sellers, you now need to lower your price a little. Now that's fine, you're still making a lot of money.

Now factor into this price reduction all the other people that are using this guaranteed money source. The price drops but everyone still makes a little money. Add more people and the price drops so much you actually lose money! This forces some of the people out. Equilibrium is achieved.

You could try to outsmart the system by waiting for the stock to rebound after the drop, which it will for sure, otherwise every stock ever would drop by 1% every 3 months!! So you wait to find the perfect time to sell after the drop, but every day you wait is a day you're not moving on to the next guaranteed money and cutting into your return. In general you find once equilibrium is achieved most of the various options tend to yield about the same amount of return (at least, the good ones...)

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Some real world experience to add to this: While I haven't done an exhaustive study on all stocks, in the higher-volatility low-price stocks I generally work with, you'd actually be better off doing the opposite. Most of the time, I see a stock price rise about 1 to 1.5x its dividend on the lead-up to the EX date, and then drop by 1.5 to 2x its dividend after the deadline. The drop is usually temporary, and then the stock goes back to its normal trading level. As a result, if you can tolerate the risk and want to grind out in sufficiently high volume, the opposite strategy would yield more: Sell the stock the day before the dividend's ex-date and then buy it on the short and temporary drop the next day.

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    There's no arbitrage here. It's just a bet that the stock falls the next day (more than the dividend reduction) when it goes ex-dividend. Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 15:21
  • @BobBaerker Agreed, the term 'Abritrage' specifically applies to a risk free opportunity, which, due to the time lag between actions and the uncertainty of the stock price, this is not. Commented Aug 3, 2018 at 17:18

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