Dividend Announcement and Firm Value: A Test of Semi Strong Form of Efficiency at the Nairobi Stock Exchange


  •  Tobias Olweny    

Abstract

The issue surrounding policy makers is whether dividend announcements have information content. This study investigated into this concept to determine the extent, to which dividend announcements have information content, its effect on firm value and what this implied on the semi strong efficiency of the Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE). A sample of trading delays in each year for the period 1999- 2003 was drawn from firms listed on NSE. The data was purely secondary data of the firms listed on the NSE, stock prices and dividend announcements. The event study methodology was used analyze information content of dividend announcements for the four firms.
The results based on an estimation window of more than hundred trading days per year show that, for the analyzed firms, dividend announcements do indeed convey useful information about the future value of a firm. This empirical investigation came up with the following findings: First Dividend announcements have pertinent information, which is consistent with Modigliani and Miller (1958) information content hypothesis. Second, the information content in dividend announcements significantly affects the firm value as shown by large spikes in the graphs. Third the NSE is not semi strong from efficiency and therefore market participants can make abnormal profits by trading on public information, such as dividend announcements.


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