How To Handle Poor Office Manners - Diplomatically

Written by Joli Andre


How To Handle Poor Office Manners - Diplomatically

It only takes one person to disturbrepparttar emotional atmosphere and productivity of an office. Others become irritated byrepparttar 106720 offender’s seemly harmless behaviors and now their productivity suffers too. Here is a scenario and how it may be handled diplomatically:

You have a co-worker who is affecting office morale by their inappropriate behavior. Extended cigarette and bathroom breaks, taking a flood of personal calls, extra long lunch breaks, taking off for assorted appointments and seen playing Internet games duringrepparttar 106721 work day.

Tellrepparttar 106722 supervisor orrepparttar 106723 senior office executive about this problem that others have observed and want resolved. If you arerepparttar 106724 senior leader, then privately call in this individual and tell them you are aware of this

The Myth of the Earnings Yield

Written by Sam Vaknin


In American novels, well intorepparttar 1950's, one finds protagonists usingrepparttar 106719 future stream of dividends emanating from their share holdings to send their kids to college or as collateral. Yet, dividends seemed to have gonerepparttar 106720 way ofrepparttar 106721 Hula-Hoop. Few companies distribute erratic and ever-declining dividends. The vast majority don't bother. The unfavorable tax treatment of distributed profits may have beenrepparttar 106722 cause.

The dwindling of dividends has implications which are nothing short of revolutionary. Most ofrepparttar 106723 financial theories we use to determinerepparttar 106724 value of shares were developed inrepparttar 106725 1950's and 1960's, when dividends were in vogue. They invariably relied on a few implicit and explicit assumptions:

Thatrepparttar 106726 fair "value" of a share is closely correlated to its market price; That price movements are mostly random, though somehow related torepparttar 106727 aforementioned "value" ofrepparttar 106728 share. In other words,repparttar 106729 price of a security is supposed to converge with its fair "value" inrepparttar 106730 long term; Thatrepparttar 106731 fair value responds to new information aboutrepparttar 106732 firm and reflects it - though how efficiently is debatable. The strong efficiency market hypothesis assumes that new information is fully incorporated in prices instantaneously. But how isrepparttar 106733 fair value to be determined?

A discount rate is applied torepparttar 106734 stream of all future income fromrepparttar 106735 share - i.e., its dividends. What should this rate be is sometimes hotly disputed - but usually it isrepparttar 106736 coupon of "riskless" securities, such as treasury bonds. But since few companies distribute dividends - theoreticians and analysts are increasingly forced to deal with "expected" dividends rather than "paid out" or actual ones.

The best proxy for expected dividends is net earnings. The higherrepparttar 106737 earnings -repparttar 106738 likelier andrepparttar 106739 higherrepparttar 106740 dividends. Thus, in a subtle cognitive dissonance, retained earnings - often plundered by rapacious managers - came to be regarded as some kind of deferred dividends.

The rationale is that retained earnings, once re-invested, generate additional earnings. Such a virtuous cycle increasesrepparttar 106741 likelihood and size of future dividends. Even undistributed earnings, goesrepparttar 106742 refrain, provide a rate of return, or a yield - known asrepparttar 106743 earnings yield. The original meaning ofrepparttar 106744 word "yield" - income realized by an investor - was undermined by this Newspeak.

Why was this oxymoron -repparttar 106745 "earnings yield" - perpetuated?

According to all current theories of finance, inrepparttar 106746 absence of dividends - shares are worthless. The value of an investor's holdings is determined byrepparttar 106747 income he stands to receive from them. No income - no value. Of course, an investor can always sell his holdings to other investors and realize capital gains (or losses). But capital gains - though also driven by earnings hype - do not feature in financial models of stock valuation.

Faced with a dearth of dividends, market participants - and especially Wall Street firms - could obviously not live withrepparttar 106748 ensuing zero valuation of securities. They resorted to substituting future dividends -repparttar 106749 outcome of capital accumulation and re-investment - for present ones. The myth was born.

Thus, financial market theories starkly contrast with market realities.

No one buys shares because he expects to collect an uninterrupted and equiponderant stream of future income inrepparttar 106750 form of dividends. Evenrepparttar 106751 most gullible novice knows that dividends are a mere apologue, a relic ofrepparttar 106752 past. So why do investors buy shares? Because they hope to sell them to other investors later at a higher price.

While past investors looked to dividends to realize income from their shareholdings - present investors are more into capital gains. The market price of a share reflects its discounted expected capital gains,repparttar 106753 discount rate being its volatility. It has little to do with its discounted future stream of dividends, as current financial theories teach us.

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