Microsoft to Pay
Shareholders
Up to $75B Over Four Years
Cash Hoard to be Spent on Dividends, Stock Buybacks!!!!
By ALLISON LINN, AP
AP
Bill Gates, chairman of Microsoft Corporation
SEATTLE (July 21) - Microsoft Corp. plans to pay out most of its cash hoard
directly to shareholders through a combination of dividends and stock buybacks
totaling up to $75 billion over four years, the software maker said Tuesday,
ending speculation about what it planned to do with its billions in cash
reserves.
Microsoft, which has a near monopoly on the software that runs the world's
desktop computers, generated $10.4 billion in cash during its 2003 fiscal year
alone. But its stock price has been little changed for almost three years,
increasing pressure on the company to do something with its cash reserves that
now total at least $56 billion.
With the bulk of Microsoft's legal troubles behind it, the company said it
finally felt free to spend part of its stockpile.
The Redmond, Wash.-based company plans to pay a one-time dividend of $3 per
share - at a cost of $32 billion - and will double its annual dividend to 32
cents per share. Microsoft began offering a dividend in March 2003. Microsoft
also said it plans to buy back up to $30 billion of the company's stock over the
next four years.
The payout suggests Microsoft has, at least for now, put off plans to use the
money to make a major acquisition to punch up growth. Microsoft disclosed last
month that it had initiated merger talks with German software maker SAP, but
called off the potentially costly deal after deciding it would be too complex.
The Microsoft plan dwarfs $1.9 billion in dividends that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Inc. paid its shareholders in April, including $1.4 billion to MGM's largest
shareholder, billionaire Kirk Kerkorian.
Chairman Bill Gates said his share of the one-time payout, which amounts to
about $3 billion, will be pledged to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the
billionaire's philanthropic organization.
The monumental payout will give shareholders a quick gain and the buyback may
help lift Microsoft's languishing share price. Microsoft stock, one of the
nation's most widely held issues, has hovered between $23 and $30 since April
2002, despite steady profits and a growing pile of cash.
The news gave Microsoft shares a boost. The dividend and buyback plans were
announced after the close of markets. Shares of Microsoft surged more than 5
percent in after-hours trading after closing the regular session up 37 cents at
$28.32.
Microsoft withdrew an employee stock option plan in September because of
stagnant share prices and instead began giving employees smaller amounts of
stock outright.
Microsoft also recently imposed cost-cutting measures amid efforts to keep
profits up as its once-stellar revenue growth threatens to slow.
Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer defended the company's future prospects
Tuesday, saying he believes the company has ''some of the greatest dollar growth
prospects in front of us of any company in the world. ... Now we have to execute
well.''
Goldman Sachs analyst Rick Sherlund said analysts might have favored that more
money be spent on stock buybacks instead of the one-time payout, since that
could help the stock price more in the long-term.
But, he said, ''Shareholders are getting some immediate gratification from
this.''
The one-time dividend is subject to shareholder approval of an amendment that
would prevent employees who hold stock options or stock awards from being put at
a disadvantage.
The concern is that the stock price will drop on the day of the payout, so the
company wants permission to come up with a plan to make up for that loss.
If that plan is approved, the special dividend would be paid out Dec. 2 to
shareholders of record on Nov. 17.
The buyback and dividends will not affect the company's spending on new
technology, executives said.
''We are going to continue to aggressively fund research and development and all
the breakthroughs across all our businesses,'' Ballmer said in a conference call
with journalists and analysts.
Curt Anderson, Microsoft's senior director of investor relations, said the
company had not yet worked out the details of how the massive stock buyback
would work, or what the exact timing will be.
Microsoft had previously been hesitant to spend the billions it has been
amassing because of fears the money would be needed for legal disputes. But the
company said Tuesday that the large majority of its legal problems appear to be
behind it.
Microsoft has settled many of its private antitrust claims, and it cleared its
most significant U.S. legal hurdle when a federal appeals court unanimously
approved the antitrust settlement the company negotiated about two years ago
with the Bush administration. It still faces a lengthy court battle with the
European Union, where it is appealing an antitrust ruling against it.
The company said Tuesday that it continues to believe it has good prospects for
growing its cash reserves, but it has not provided any specific guidance on cash
flows.
Microsoft is to report financial results for its 2004 fiscal year, which ended
June 30, on Thursday.
Because Microsoft continues to add billions in cash reserves each year, analyst
Charles Di Bona of Bernstein & Co. said the amount that Microsoft plans to spend
over the next four years will still leave it with a nice cushion of cash. That
means the company could still pursue an acquisition or be prepared for an
unforeseen event.
AP-NY-07-21-04 0143EDT