Dividends for Index CFDs
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What are dividends?
A dividend is a distribution of a portion of a company’s earnings to its shareholders. Dividends are often issued as cash payments if you own the underlying share, although they can also be paid out to investors in the form of additional shares.*
Upcoming Index Dividends
Index | Monday 23/12 | Tuesday 24/12 | Wednesday 25/12 |
---|---|---|---|
NETH25 | |||
AUS200 | 0.21 | ||
FRA40 | |||
MidDE50 | |||
CHINAH | |||
HK50 | |||
SPA35 | |||
US30 | |||
NAS100 | 3.59 | ||
JPN225 | |||
NOR25 | |||
US2000 | 0.13 | 0.04 | |
SCI25 | |||
SWI20 | |||
CA60 | |||
US500 | 0.35 | ||
EUSTX50 | |||
GERTEC30 | |||
SA40 | |||
UK100 | 0.61 | ||
CN50 |
*Expected dividend adjustments stated in full index points per contract. Figures stated are forecast amounts sourced via Bloomberg. The final adjustment may differ from the forecast amount previously displayed.
Key features of dividends:
- Dividends are an incentive and a form of compensation for the shareholder, normally paid out quarterly or semi-annually.
- They're one of the primary reasons investors are attracted to a business.
- Ordinarily, the greater the cash flow of the business and profitability, the more likely a percentage of that capital will be returned to shareholders.
- Dividends are a great way to assess the financial health of a business to investors.
Of course, not all companies make these payments. Many high growth companies may choose not to return cash to shareholders but will re-invest the funds into the business if they feel the capital can better reward shareholders through greater earnings growth. In this case, investors are happy to forgo a dividend in the hope of increased capital appreciation.
What does ex-dividend mean?
The ex-dividend date is the day on which the stock no longer includes an entitlement to the upcoming dividend payment.
- It's usually one business day before the dividend is paid out by the company.
- Traders opening a position on the ex-dividend date will not be entitled to, or are required to pay, the dividend on their positions.
- The value of the stock will fall on this date because of the dividend payout.
What do dividends mean for traders?
When a company pays out a dividend, all things being equal, the share price of that company should fall by that amount. This is because the company has paid cash held on its balance sheet to shareholders and that cash component is a consideration for attributing a theoretical value to the company.
For a stock index, if some of the constituent companies pay dividends out at the same time, the value of one of the many indices we offer can be affected. Each company has a percentage weighting on the index, which will be determined most commonly by market capitalisation. The adjustment to the index will be greater when the most heavily weighted companies pay dividends.
- Always remember that because dividend payouts are scheduled events, market forces aside, traders aren’t able to gain or lose from the ensuing price action.
- If a trader has an open position during a dividend adjustment, we ensure there's no financial impact on your trading account.
- We do this by either debiting or crediting you with the same amount you've incurred on the running profit or loss due to the dividend adjustment.
Clients will find this amendment in trading account history, which you can find on each platform.
Timing the adjustment & Fair Value
Our liquidity providers are key to creating a rolling cash equity index product for clients to trade. They start with the front contract in the futures market and derive an index price for clients according to the underlying index level and the futures price.
- This fair value is effectively the difference between our cash price and front month in the futures market.
- It's a blended calculation of interest and expected upcoming dividends from the present to the expiry of the index futures contract.
As each day passes, our cash index and futures price converge. One key reason for that are dividends. Cash markets tend to trade at a premium to futures markets, simply because while the futures index has interest (up to the expiry) encapsulated in the price, expected dividends (from the index constituents) are removed.
Spot Price V Futures Price
When a company pays a dividend and the share price drops on the open, our cash equity index will fall too, as the dividends are removed and we move closer to the futures price.
As the price of the individual share drops when the official market opens, in the vast majority of our equity indices this is the time when our liquidity provider will then correct the fair value and reflect the dividend adjustment in the index.
This is not the case in the AUS200 as the dividend adjustment to fair value takes place at 4pm AEST, the day before those stocks go ex-dividend.
Example:
Five companies in the US30 go ex-dividend on the 8th October. The aggregation of the dividends and the index weight of the stocks equates to 20-index points. With the US30 trading at 28,000, upon the re-open of the market the five stocks fall by the dividend amount and our US30 price falls to 27,980 as the fair value is adjusted.
For a client that is long, their account will be cash adjusted by 20-points, multiplied by their stake.