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Dividend discount model meaning

What does Dividend discount model mean?
A valuation method used by lawyers and expert valuers to estimate the fair value of shares by discounting a company’s expected future dividends to their present value. It is not defined in legislation or case law, but is a recognised corporate finance methodology applied across multiple legal contexts. The model projects dividends, applies an equity discount rate (cost of equity), and commonly includes a long‑term growth rate and terminal value. It is sensitive to assumptions and best suited to mature, dividend‑paying companies. In practice across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland, it is used in share valuation exercises for: - shareholder disputes and remedies (for example, unfair prejudice under Companies Act 2006, s.994; oppression under Companies Act 2014 (Ireland), s.212); - mergers and acquisitions (including schemes of arrangement and squeeze‑outs); - expert determinations, buy‑backs and employee share plan pricing; and - negotiations and evidence in Takeover Code and corporate transactions. Courts and tribunals may accept the dividend discount model where appropriate, but may prefer other methods (such as discounted cash flow, earnings multiples or net asset value) if dividends are not a reliable proxy for distributable cash. Key legal issues include the reasonableness of forecasts, the chosen discount rate and...
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View the related Practice Notes about Dividend discount model

PRACTICE NOTES
Comprehensive glossary of UK restructuring and insolvency terms, covering Companies Act schemes, Part 26A plans, IA 1986 processes, and cross‑border concepts including COMI, UNCITRAL and assimilated EU rules.

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Banking, Finance, Capital Markets, Derivatives and Insolvency Law Glossary including Islamic finance

Banking & Finance glossary A Auditing and Accounting Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) The foremost Islamic, international, autonomous, independent, not-for-profit corporate body that develops and issues accounting, auditing, governance, ethics and Shari’ah benchmarks and standards for Islamic Financial Institutions (IFIs) and the wider Islamic finance sector. Founded in Bahrain in 1991, it is backed by a number of institutional members across more than 45 countries, including central banks and regulatory authorities, financial institutions, accounting and auditing practices, and legal firms. Its pronouncements are currently applied by leading Islamic financial institutions across the world and have advanced a progressive and gradual harmonisation of global Islamic finance practice. It also delivers professional qualification programmes—notably Certified Islamic Professional Accountant (CIPA), Certified Shari’ah Adviser and Auditor (CSAA), and the corporate compliance programme—in efforts to strengthen the industry’s human capital and governance frameworks. For further details, see Practice Note: Key participants in the Islamic finance industry—Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI). Acceleration Acceleration is the formal action...

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