Determinants of payout choice between open market repurchase, tender offer repurchase and special dividends

Abstract The paper aims to identify the variables contributing to special payouts considering open market repurchase, tender offer repurchases, and special dividends. A multinomial logit model has been used to investigate the choice of payout out of 754 payout announcements made between 2004 and 2017 in India. The study investigates agency cost, shareholder heterogeneity, clientele effect, distribution size, misvaluation, and takeover threat. The MNL results suggest that open market repurchase is chosen when the takeover threat is high, firms are significant, or in case of undervaluation of firms. Tender offer repurchase is preferred in high agency cost, high takeover threat, low shareholder heterogeneity, and undervaluation. The study further investigates the nature of ownership in terms of a business group affiliated and standalone firms. The result of the study suggests the nature of ownership impacts the choice of dividend payout choice. Group affiliated firms are driven by clientele effect and distribution size, and in standalone firms’ agency and shareholder heterogeneity holds. The Bayesian approach which is based on the combination of previous information and the current data available is used in the study for MNL. The findings suggest that payout choices of open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase over special dividends are based on misvaluation and shareholder heterogeneity.

The team for this research consists of Dr Urvashi Varma, Dr Raveesh K and Prof Alka Munjal. Dr Urvashi Varma is working with Amity Business School, Amity University Uttar Pradesh as an assistant professor in the area of Finance. Her research interest is Payout policies and financial systems. Dr Raveesh K is serving as an Assistant Professor at Indian Institute of Management Bodh Gaya in the area of Accounting and Finance. Prof (Dr) Alka Munjal is the Ex-Dean Student academic affairs and support services at Amity University Uttar Pradesh and Professor in Strategy and Finance. She has keen interest in consultancy and research in the field of strategic finance spanning over two decades. Payout policy of firms is an area all three of us specially with the increase in the share buybacks in India in the recent years. The study will be helpful to understand the choice on the payout mode.

PUBLIC INTEREST STATEMENT
This paper focuses on the drivers to choose the payout mode for corporates in India. The three modes discussed are open market repurchase, tender offer repurchase and special dividends. Firms having higher agency cost, threat of takeover, having lower history of dividend payments and lower dividend payouts amount prefer open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase over special dividends. The nature of ownership of a firm (if affiliated to a business group or standalone) also impacts the choice of the payout adopted by the firm. The study also finds that the share buybacks are adopted over special dividends in case the firms are misvalued.

Introduction
Payout policy, which encompasses form, amount, and timing of distributions of return to the shareholder, is a core corporate finance activity. Decisions regarding dividends and repurchases (or buybacks) constitute the payout policy of a firm. Share buybacks can be performed by open market repurchase or tender offer repurchase. Motives of share buyback have been discussed extensively in literature as a free cash flow hypothesis, substitution hypothesis, agency cost, leverage hypothesis, liquidity hypothesis, and signaling hypothesis by S. K. . Comparing dividends and share repurchases, Dayanandan et al. (2020) suggest that it has been observed that share repurchases are more flexible than dividends. However, share repurchases have been criticized over dividends for focusing on short-term earnings and price. They tend to lose the capital that can be used for long-term profits. The choice between open market repurchase, tender offer repurchase, and special dividends is an intriguing question and has attained researchers' focus for a long time.
Compared with dividends, repurchases offer flexibility to the manager in terms of the amount and timing of the distribution. However, this flexibility comes with a cost. This flexibility is of importance when firms are financially constrained since buybacks are curtailed or eliminated to preserve liquidity. Brav et al. (2005) surveyed financial executives who dislike dividends' rigidity over share repurchase since once the firm initiates a dividend, it is expected to pay dividends in the future. G. Grullon and Michaely have found that large firms have shifted the payouts from dividends to share repurchases, hence maintaining the propensity to payout. Miller and Modigliani (1961) have suggested that in perfect market conditions, corporations and shareholders should be indifferent to the payment of dividends. However, Fama and Miller (1972) state that perfect markets do not exist and market imperfections help in deciding the choice of disbursementlike taxes, transaction cost, information collection cost, risk of partial expropriation borne by the uninformed investor, risk of a less than perfectly elastic supply curve for a firm's share due to heterogeneous shareholder valuation. Ofer and Thakor (1987) have said that the higher is the cost borne by the manager in the transaction (buyback or dividend) stronger is the credibility of the signal. Brennan and Thakor (1990) suggest that share repurchases have a cost compared to dividends, and the investor bears an information cost or else loses the ownership to a better-informed shareholder.
Dividends are for small distributions, while open market repurchase is for large distributions because the customer will incur more information costs. The largest distributions are through a tender offer. Bagwell (1991, Bagwell, 1992 has found large firms followed by analysts do open market repurchase, have lower insider ownership, low heterogeneity, and flat curves for their stocks. Small firms use tender offer buybacks since they are characterized by high insider ownership, dispersion in shareholder valuation, and steep curves for their stocks. Comment and Jarrell (1991) have found in their study that a Fixed price tender offer is a more credible signal for undervaluation than a Dutch offer because the average premium paid is more significant in a fixed price tender offer. Also, in this case, the insiders set the terms of the trade Tender offer buyback is prevalent in firms with high uncertainty for shareholder valuation, the firms are mature, and low insider ownership is present. Vafeas (1997) has studied the relationship between tender offer buyback agency cost, and free cash flow is looked into. Firms take up tender offer buybacks with high agency costs, high ownership, high debt, increased stock market performance before payout, and large cash to distribute. Lie and Lie (1999) suggest that there is a strong relationship between dividend yield and payment choice in firms with a high level of institutional ownership.
High dividend yield firms prefer special dividends. Also, Jaganathan et al. (2000) suggests that Firms with volatile cash flows use buybacks as a payout option. Lie (2000) said that firms repurchase when they are undervalued, as an alternate to investments.
In India, the total special payouts made by firms listed on the Bombay stock exchange (BSE) between 2004 and 2017 has been Rs 2,225,309.5mn. Thirty percent of the special payouts made is through special dividends, while 15.82% is done by open market repurchase, and the balance 54.18% is through a fixed-price tender offer. The choice of payout policy of a firm can be attributed to different factors like the ownership structure, the current level of payout, the size of the distribution, and the degree of stock undervaluation. Share repurchase and special dividends are referred to as special payouts because of their infrequent occurrence.
In the Indian context, S. K. , in their study, look into the impact of signaling, excess cash flow, substitution, leverage agency cost, and liquidity on selecting between open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase using logistic regression for 430 non-financial buybacks in India between 1998-99 to 2017-18. They find substantial cash reserves, and high promoter ownership drives tender offer repurchase. Tender offer firms are less leveraged than open market repurchase firms. The firms paying regular dividends prefer open market repurchase. Also, companies with a higher turnover ratio choose a tender offer. A study by Hyderabad (2009), Chatterjee and Mukherjee (2015) looks into the price behaviors following share buyback in India. Varma et al. (2018) have analyzed free cash flow, capital structure, profitability as the choice for open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase for 54 tender offer repurchase and 90 repurchase firms using Tobit regression. The researchers find a tender offer is enacted for capital structure correction and open market repurchase for dividend substitution.
The existing literature in India focuses on the comparison of only open-market repurchase and tender offer repurchase as a payout method Varma et al. (2016). Special dividends should also be looked into as a payout method used by corporates. The present study identifies this gap and includes along with open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase the use of special dividends. Also, misvaluation has not been observed in any of the previous studies as a significant variable for being a driver to repurchase, so the present study intends to check the significance of this hypothesis in the Indian context. The next part of the paper discusses the theoretical framework of the payout choices in section 2 regarding shareholder heterogeneity, agency cost framework, clientele effect, size of the payout distribution, level of undervaluation, prior share performance, etc. the takeover threat. The sample, data sources, and the choice of variables are discussed in section 3. The results and findings are discussed in section 4. Section 5 presents the paper's conclusion and its limitations.

Theoretical framework
Studies by Mishra (2005) have identified the requisite candidacy for share buyback in India.

Shareholder heterogeneity
Shareholder heterogeneity, which refers to the firm's nature of control, is considered an essential determinant of the payout policy. Firms characterized by low heterogeneity or lower insider ownership prefer open market repurchases over the tender offer. However, special dividends are preferred for firms where the shareholder heterogeneity is even lower than open market repurchase. Gaspar et al. (2012) discuss the amount of repurchase and its frequency increases for firms held by short-term investors over dividend payment.

Agency cost
Agency cost is again an implication of the ownership of the firm. Firms having higher insider ownership and high debt are characterized by low agency costs. Such firms prefer open market repurchase as a payout method. When the firm has idle cash and limited investment opportunities, it might target agency conflict (Dittmar, 2000). When the firm has an agency conflict, the firm can use share buyback to return the excess cash to the shareholders. Since the firm buys back at a premium, the shareholders can tender their shares to benefit the situation. Share buyback hence saves the firm from the threat of excess investment in non-profitable investments. The companies having lower leverage than optimum can also use share buybacks for capital structure correction. Share repurchase in India leads to the cancellation of the repurchased shares. Hence, it reduces the equity. Reduction in equity capital has an incremental effect on the leverage of the firm. Therefore, buyback programs help the company arrive at optimal leverage.

Clientele effect
The current payout level of the firm also affects the future payout choice. Firms that have declared special dividends over repurchase. The regular dividend-paying firms would prefer special dividends. Dividends and share buybacks are similar in the sense they distribute or return the firm's excess cash to the shareholder, so they can as well be seen as substitutes. However, while dividend distribution signals that the firm is performing well, however, buyback signals firm's undervaluation. (DeMarzo, 2008)

Size of distribution
The size of the dividend distribution also can create differentiation in the payout choice. The firm where the size of the distribution is less special dividends is preferred over tender offer repurchases. The choice of open market repurchase has been made by firms where the dividend payment has been higher than the tender offer repurchase.

Level of undervaluation
The level of undervaluation also provides a discriminator amongst the alternate payout choices. Repurchases and dividends act as signals, but the cost of signaling is higher in the case of a repurchase than dividend; hence, repurchases are believed to be more credible signals. Fixedprice tender offers are supposed to be stronger signals than tender, open market repurchase since the average premium paid is higher. In the case of a fixed tender offer, the trade conditions are set up by insiders. The signaling theory has been abundantly discussed by (D'Mello & Shroff, 2000). When the firm's managers believe that the firm's shares price is trading much below its intrinsic worth, they believe buying back at a premium will give a signal about management's faith in the company's wellbeing. The investors who believe in the signal tend to stay invested in the company, and those investors who would not want to stay invested tender their shares at the premium price offered. Dividends and share buybacks are similar in the sense they distribute or return the firm's excess cash to the shareholder, so they can as well be seen as substitutes. However, while dividend distribution signals that firm is performing well however, buyback signals firm's undervaluation (DeMarzo, 2008).

Share price performance before distribution
If the firm's share price performance prior to the distribution is low, such firms prefer tender offer, while in case of high share price performance prior to the distribution, the firm would prefer open market repurchase.

Takeover threat
The firm encountering high takeover threat prefer fixed price tender offer. A firm can thwart the potential threat of takeover by buying back their shares at a premium. The premium price makes the takeover difficult for the acquirer. By gaining greater internal control, share buybacks are an effective means of stopping an attempted takeover. Share buyback can also remove minor shareholders from the shareholding In the present study, we also look for the firms' ownership if their ownership belongs to a business group or are they standalone firms and their relationship with payout choice. Zeng (2011) studied in Canada, where firms belong to business groups and have holdings in other firms, firms with higher inter-corporate deposits have a higher propensity to pay dividends over share repurchases.

Sample
The study focuses on 754 payout announcements made between the period of 2004 to 2017. A total of 383 of these announcements are special dividends, and 371 are buyback announcements. Out of the 371 buyback announcements, 184 are open market repurchase, and 187 are tender offer repurchase announcements, as can be seen in Figure 1. The buyback announcement data has been collected from the website of India's securities exchange board (SEBI). Like the number of shares bought back, the details on the buyback were collected for individual companies from the Capitaline database. The special dividend data has been collected from the CMIE prowess database. The data on the respective companies' financial indicators across the years have been collected from the CMIE prowess database. Table 1   Source: Compiled using data from Securities Exchange Board of India, Capitaline The type of ownership has categorized the firms making payout announcements into the business group and standalone firms. In the case of Tender offer buyback firms, out of 188 firms' 91 firms were a part of the business group, while 97 firms were standalone firms in which 80 firms had private Indian ownership and 17 firms had private foreign ownership. In the case of Open market repurchase firms out of the 166 firms announcing for open market repurchase during the study period, 89 firms were a part of some business group, and 77 firms were standalone firms out of which 63 were Indian private firms while the remaining 14 were foreign private firms. For the firms paying out special dividends out of the 375 firms, 236 firms were a part of the business group, while 139 firms were standalone firms, out of which 88 firms were Indian private sector firms while 51 firms were foreign private sector firms.

Research method
The firms can use any of the three payout choices out of open market repurchase, tender offer repurchase, and special dividends. The choice of payment mode can be explained through various firm performance parameters discussed in previous literature. Dittmar (2000) has used Tobit regression for choice of payouts. S. K.  have used logistic regression to identify the drivers of open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase. The payout choices, namely tender offer repurchases, open market repurchases, or special dividends, are categorical variables. Since the payout choices have more than two options, the MNL model will be appropriate in the present study than a simple logit model. The ordered logistic model cannot be used since the dependent variable is not in order. Caudill et al. (2006) made the first use of MNL adjusted for choice-based sampling.
In the MNL model, two sets are considered at a time, and pairwise comparisons are made. Out of the three payout out choices, one is considered as a base, and the log odds are seen in favor of the other payout choices other than the base case one equation at a time. Since we have three payout choices; hence, two results are obtained on the pairwise comparison. (n-1). The results obtained from MNL are used both for inference and prediction. Also, the classification error can also be looked into different Where, X 1 represents shareholder heterogeneity X 2 represents agency cost X 3 represents the clientele effect X 4 represents size of the previous distribution X 5 represents the level of misvaluation X 6 represents the takeover threat Representing the right-hand side of the equation by Y 1 and right-hand side of equation 2 by Y 2 , raising both equation 1 and equation 2 to the exponent power and simplifying the probabilities of a special dividend, open market repurchase, and tender offer repurchase are given in equations 3, 4 and 5 respectively The marginal effect shows the difference in the probabilities predicted as per equations 3, 4 and 5 for one case in one category relative to the base or reference category. The marginal effect on the dependent variable, which is a categorical variable in the present study, shows how one variable's probabilities change as the other is changed by one. The marginal effect on open market repurchase would show how much more or less likely open market repurchases are practiced relative to special dividends during the study period. Similarly, the marginal effect on tender offer repurchase would show how much more or less likely tender offer repurchase is practiced relative to special dividends during the study period.
MNL acts as the best estimation choice in case of choice behavior, and hence the same approach has been used to investigate the choice of payout options in India.
The Bayesian approach represents an alternative method for the estimation of MNL. Bayesian MNL is better suited for unordered categorical variables. The Bayesian interface is used to estimate the parameters in the models. In the case of MNL, the Bayesian interface considers the preliminary information on parameter values. The Bayesian approach is based on the combination of previous information and the current data available. Instead of the confidence intervals used in classical methods, the Bayesian estimates are based on the posterior distribution. This paper also includes the Bayesian multinomial logit approach to looking at the choice of payout options by Indian firms during the study period.

Determinants of payout choice
The variables LSIZE and INSTOWN are a proxy for shareholder heterogeneity. LSIZE is the market value of the firm prior to the announcement date taken from CMIE Prowess. A similar calculation has been used by Caudill et al. (2006). INSTOWN is the ratio of shares held by institutional investors by the total number of shares held at the end of the year prior to the announcement.
DEBT is a proxy for agency cost. It is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets of the firm at the end of the year prior to the announcement. DIVYLD is the proxy for history of dividend paid, also known as the clientele effect. It is the ratio of the firm's regular dividend to the firm's market capitalization at the end of the year before the special payout announcement.
DSIZE is a proxy for the distribution size. In the case of open market repurchase or tender offer repurchase, the ratio of the number of shares repurchased in the year to the number of shares issued at the end of the year after which the buyback or repurchase announcement is made. In the case of special dividends DSIZE, the ratio of the special dividend paid to the firm's market capitalization 5 days prior to the announcement.
MISVAL is a proxy for the level of undervaluation and is measured as the ratio of the market capitalization of the firm to the book value of equity at the end of the financial year before the announcement of the special payout.
The threat for takeover has been studied in the present study using a dummy variable. The data has been obtained from CMIE Prowess on takeover threat. The data analyzed during the study period reflect that out of the 375 firms paying special dividends, 45 firms (12% of the sample) had experienced a threat for takeover. Eighty firms out of the 188 firms announcing tender offer buybacks (42.55%) experienced a takeover threat. However, in open market repurchase, 128 firms out of 166 firms (71.12%) experienced a takeover threat. Table 2 presents the means and medians of the seven independent variables. In these, the variables DSIZE and MISVAL needed adjustment for outliers (windsorized at ±10%). The difference between the three special payouts is studied using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test.

Descriptive statistics
Looking at shareholder heterogeneity, the open market repurchase firms have higher institutional ownership as expected, but the debt to total assets ratio is also high for them than tender

Result from multinomial logit model
The multinomial logit regression results for open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase are represented in Table 4. The result of MNL reflects that LSIZE and TD are significant for open market repurchase at 1% level of significance. In cases of tender offer repurchase DEBT/TA, LSIZE, TD is significant at 1% level and INSTOWN, MISVAL are significant at 5% level.
The ownership pattern of the firm has been considered to further look into the drivers for the payout mode selected by Indian firms. The firms are divided into categories of a business group affiliated firms and standalone firms on the basis of business ownership. The standalone firms are further classified as Indian private sector firms and foreign private sector firms. This analysis is instrumental in understanding the payout behavior of a firm based on ownership.  Table 5 also presents the findings for the tender offer's payout choice over special dividends across the three ownership forms of a business group affiliated firms, standalone Indian private sector firms, and standalone foreign private sector firms.313 firms were group firms,154 firms were Indian private sector firms and 63 firms were foreign private sector firms. The business group affiliated firms preferring tender offer repurchase have low leverage (significant at 5%), low dividend yield, previous dividend payment history. In the case of Indian private sector standalone Wilcoxon rank-sum test has been used to identify the difference in means between the different payout choices. Varma et al., Cogent Economics & Finance (2021), 9: 1934975 https://doi.org/10. 1080/23322039.2021.1934975 firms, tender offer is preferred because of prior history of dividend payment. The variable of DSIZE is also significant in the case of standalone foreign private firms. Similar to firms undertaking open market repurchase, the firms opting for tender offer repurchase face a significant takeover threat across all the three ownership types undertaken in the study.
Firms repurchasing using tender offer are smaller in size than firms declaring special dividends looking at the negative sign of LSIZE coefficient the same has been discussed by Caudill et al. (2006). INSTOWN, a measure of shareholder heterogeneity, has a negative coefficient in Table 5, suggesting firms preferring tender offer repurchase over special dividends are characterized by having lower shareholder heterogeneity than firms desiring special dividends. DEBT/TA's coefficient is negative, implying tender offer repurchase firms have low debt or lower agency cost compared to special dividend firms; however, as per Vafeas (1997), tender offer buybacks are taken up by firms having high agency cost and high debt.
The results are presented as firms affiliated with business groups, private Indian firms, and private foreign firms. As in the previous case, the results are obtained using all seven variables. LSIZE and DEBT/TA are significant at 1% level for business group affiliated firms. LSIZE and TD are significant at 1% level for firms having standalone ownership of the Indian private sector. TD is significant at 1% level for standalone firms having foreign ownership and enacting tender offer repurchase. Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Source: Compiled using data from CMIE-Prowess, Capitaline and computed on STATA. Varma et al., Cogent Economics & Finance (2021), 9: 1934975 https://doi.org/10. 1080/23322039.2021.1934975 TD is significant at 5%, and LSIZE is significant at 10% for business group affiliated firms. TD is significant at 1% level, and DEBT/TA is significant at 5% level for standalone firms owned by the Indian private sector enacting tender offer repurchase. There were no significant variables for standalone firms owned by the foreign private sector enacting tender offer repurchase in India.
Business group firms having higher dividend yield prefer special dividends. In case the distribution size of such firms is lower special dividends are the chosen payout mode. In this ownership type larger size firms opt for tender offer buyback followed by special dividends and then open market repurchase. Special dividends are also preferred mode when takeover threat is low for these firms.
Indian private sector standalone firms prefer special dividends over open market repurchase when firms have lower leverage or when firms size is large. Lower take over threat suggest preference over special dividends. Foreign private sector controlled standalone firms choose special dividends over open market repurchase or tender offer repurchase in case of lower distribution size of dividends and low takeover threat.
The consideration of ownership in the context of a business group affiliated or standalone firms suggests that firms preferring open market repurchase across different ownership structures have higher takeover threats across different ownership structures. Since the number of observations for standalone firms owned by private foreign firms is less the results are not discussed in detail. Small firms with high agency costs prefer open market repurchase over special dividends, as Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Source: Compiled using data from CMIE-Prowess, Capitaline and computed on STATA. Varma et al., Cogent Economics & Finance (2021), 9: 1934975 https://doi.org/10. 1080/23322039.2021.1934975 shown in Table 7. In the case of tender offer, firms also the firms have a takeover threat higher than special dividends. These firms are smaller in size than firms declaring special dividends and have low debt or lower agency conflict. Table 6 presents the marginal effects, which show how variables affect the probability. Increasing DEBT/TA marginally increases the likelihood of tender offer repurchase by 0.041. Increasing LSIZE increases the probability of open market repurchase by 0.761 at 1% level of significance and the probability of tender offer repurchase by 0.864 at 5% level significance. An increase in takeover threat by 1% increases the probability of open market repurchase by 24.32% and tender offer by 4.339%. The increase in misevaluation increases the probability of tender offer repurchase at 5% significance and open market repurchase at 10% significance level.

Result of Bayesian MNL
Bayesian MNL for payout choices made by the firms in India during the study period is summarized in Table 7. In the case of special dividends over open market repurchase the significant variables at 95% interval are agency cost, Clientele effect, size of distribution, shareholder heterogeneity and takeover threat. Special dividends are opted over open market repurchase in case of low agency cost, high history of dividend payments, lower distribution size in previous year, larger size firms and higher misvaluation.
Table no VII presents the results for the Bayesian MNL for the choice of special dividends over tender offer repurchases. The significant variables at 95% level are agency cost, history of dividend paid or clientele effect, size of distribution, shareholder heterogeneity, takeover threat and level of misvaluation. The choice of special dividends over tender offer is characterized by high agency cost, high clientele effect, low size of distribution, low takeover threat and higher misvaluation.

Conclusion
The total payouts in India have seen a surge from Rs 129.34 billion in 2004 to Rs 597.91bn in 2017. Of the three payout methods special dividends have been the preferred choice in 8 out of 14 years and tender offer repurchase has been prevalent in 3 years, especially in the recent years. Open maket repurchase was the prevalent mode in 3 out of 14 years. The present study looks at developing a predictive model for special payouts, which include open market repurchase, tender offer repurchases, and special dividends for Indian companies between 2004 and 2017. The three payout modes discussed are open market repurchase, tender offer repurchase, and special dividends.
The comparison of descriptive values the payout firms on agency cost, Clientele effect, size of previous distribution, institutional ownership, and takeover threat impact the payout method's choice reflects differences between special dividend and open market repurchase firms and special dividend and tender offer firms. Firms opting special dividends over open market repurchase are characterized by higher dividend yield, lower dividend distributions, bigger size, low takeover threat and higher misvaluation. Comparing special dividend firms with tender offer firms the special dividend firms are characterized by higher leverage, higher dividend yield, lower dividend distribution and higher misvaluation.
The study deploys MNL as a predictive tool to investigate the motivation for a special payout. The study finds out that agency cost (measured by debt to total assets), shareholder heterogeneity in terms of size of the firm, takeover threat, and Clientele effect have a significant impact on the choice of open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase over special dividends. Open market repurchases are chosen when the takeover threat is high, and firms are big in size or in case of undervaluation of firms. Tender offer repurchase is preferred in case of high agency cost, high takeover threat, low shareholder heterogeneity, and undervaluation.
Firms characterised by low leverage or agency cost use tender offer repurchases over other modes of special payouts. Firms having clientele effect or high history of dividend yield use special dividends as a payout mode over open market repurchase or tender offer repurchase. Firms using open market repurchase or tender offer repurchase have greater size of distribution of dividends than firms opting for special dividends. Larger size firms prefer special dividends over open market repurchase and smaller size firms prefer tender offer buybacks as a payout mode. Special dividend paying firms experience higher takeover threat than open market repurchase frims and tender offer firms.
The nature of ownership of a firm (if affiliated to a business group or standalone) also impacts the choice of the firm's payout and firms are classified into business group and standalone firms to see the impact of ownership. Across the three ownership modes special dividends is preferred over open market repurchase and tender offer when the firm faces low takeover threat. Business group affiliated firms opt for special dividends when they have high clientele effect, lower size of distribution and higher shareholder heterogeneity. Indian private sector standalone firms choose special dividends over open market repurchase when characterized by low leverage and large size and foreign private sector controlled firms choose special dividends when characterized by lower distribution size higher misvaluation. Special dividends are preferred over tender offer across the three ownership forms when distribution size of dividends is lower. Business group affiliated firms prefer special dividends over tender offer when experiencing high leverage, higher dividend yield, small size and lower misvaluation.
Bayesian MNL has been included the prior information on parameters. The study investigates agency cost, shareholder heterogeneity, clientele effect, distribution size, misvaluation and takeover threat as determinants to payout choice. The findings are summarized in Table 8 based on the variables identified from Wesson et al. (2017) and Caudill et al. (2006).
Larger firms size prefer special dividends while firms having higher institutional ownership prefer openmarket repurchases since they are more followed. Firms having lower leverage opt for tender offer repurchase in order to improve their leverage. Special dividends are preferred by firms having higher dividend yield since it is a strong signal to the investor. Firms who have distributed prior with dividends opt for buybacks as an alternate mode to return cash and work for the benefit of the non-tendering shareholder. The level of undervaluation is more in tender offer firms and firms who experience higher takeover threat prefer buyback over special dividends as a payout mode.
Using the Bayesian approach for MNL, the results show that misvaluation is the driver for both open market repurchase and tender offer repurchase over special dividends. The findings of the study have been reinforced in the prior literature. This study adds to misvaluation as a significant driver in the Indian context, which has been the most significant contribution of this study. The study's payout techniques are not a substitute to each other but are unique to agency cost, shareholder heterogeneity, clientele effect, distribution size, and mis valuation.