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Dividend yield meaning

What does Dividend yield mean?
In legal practice, dividend yield describes the income return on a share and is commonly used in corporate transactions, securities disclosures and investment mandates. It is the annual cash dividend per share divided by the prevailing market share price, expressed as a percentage. Dividend yield is not defined in legislation or case law; it is a market convention used across corporate, securities, pensions and trust contexts. Drafting should state the calculation basis, for example: - whether “annual” means the last financial year, trailing twelve months, the most recent dividend annualised, or a forecast; - whether only ordinary (recurring) dividends are included or special/extraordinary dividends as well; - the reference share price (for example, closing price on a specified date) and currency; and - whether the figure is gross or net of withholding taxes. In the UK, dividends are generally paid without withholding; in Ireland, dividend withholding tax may apply to investors, though yield is typically presented on a gross basis. The term is used consistently across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. Practically, it is relied on to compare income characteristics of shares and to inform advice on distribution policy, share buy-backs, valuation, due diligence and disclosures in prospectuses and shareholder circulars.
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