Corporate Actions Explained: Dividends, Bonus, Splits, Buybacks, Rights Issue & More

 

Corporate actions are one of the most important concepts for stock market investors. Whenever a company distributes profits, restructures shares, raises capital, or rewards shareholders, it does so through a corporate action.

This article explains all major corporate actions and the timeline associated with them—using simple examples.


1. Dividends: Sharing Profits With Shareholders

dividend is a portion of company profits distributed to shareholders.

Example:
In 2021, Wipro declared a ₹1 dividend.
The face value of Wipro at the time was ₹2.

So the dividend payout = 50% of face value

Key points:

  • Dividends are not mandatory
  • Management decides whether to distribute profits
  • Paid on a per-share basis
  • Investors receive dividends directly in their bank accounts


    2. Corporate Action Timeline

    Every corporate action follows the same date structure:

    ✔ Announcement Date

    Company publicly announces the corporate action (dividend, bonus, buyback, etc.)

    ✔ Record Date

    Company checks who are the eligible shareholders for receiving benefits.

    ✔ Ex-Date

    This date is 2 days before the record date.
    Buyers who purchase shares on or after the ex-date are not eligible.

    Because of the T+2 settlement cycle, ex-date determines eligibility.

    ✔ Price Adjustment After Corporate Action

    After going ex-dividend, the stock price usually drops by the dividend amount.


    3. Bonus Shares: Free Shares From Company Reserves

    bonus issue gives free shares to shareholders from company reserves.

    Example:

    1:1 Bonus Issue

    • You have: 100 shares
    • You receive: 100 extra shares
    • New total: 200 shares
    • Price gets halved (₹75 → ₹37.5), but total value remains same

      3:1 Bonus Issue

      • You have: 30 shares
      • You receive: 90 bonus shares
      • New total: 120 shares
      • Price adjusts from ₹550 → ₹137.5
      • Total value remains the same

        Purpose of Bonus Issue:

        • Increase retail investor participation
        • Reduce share price to make it more affordable

          Bonus shares also come with:

          • Announcement date
          • Record date
          • Ex-Date


            4. Stock Split: Reducing Face Value, Increasing Number of Shares

            In a stock split, the company reduces the face value and increases the number of shares.

            Example:

            1:2 Split

            • Face value: ₹10 → ₹5
            • Shares double in quantity
            • Price adjusts accordingly

              Splits make the share more affordable without changing the investor’s total value.


              5. Buyback: Company Buying Its Own Shares

              buyback is when the company repurchases its own shares using its profits.

              Why companies do buybacks:

              • Increase EPS (earnings per share)
              • Show confidence in business
              • Prevent hostile takeover
              • Support falling stock prices
              • Consolidate promoter stake

                Types of Buybacks:

                1. Open Market Buyback
                  Company buys shares directly from the exchange.

                2. Tender Offer / Fixed Price Buyback
                  Shareholders are invited to sell at a fixed premium price.
                  Investors participate through their broker’s portal (e.g., Zerodha Console).

                Buybacks are generally considered bullish.


                6. Rights Issue: Raising Fresh Capital From Existing Shareholders

                rights issue allows the company to raise capital from existing shareholders, not from the public.

                Investors get the right, but not the obligation, to buy new shares at a discounted price.

                Why rights issue happens:

                • Expansion plans
                • Reducing debt
                • Raising money without launching a fresh IPO

                  Rights issues are a privilege for existing shareholders.


                  7. Other Corporate Actions (Less Common)

                  These include:

                  • OFS (Offer for Sale)
                  • Rights Entitlements (RE)
                  • Mergers & Acquisitions
                  • Reverse Mergers

                    They are covered in detail in advanced stock market modules.


                    Key Takeaways

                    ✔ Dividends reward shareholders from profits
                    ✔ Bonus shares increase quantity but not value
                    ✔ Splits make shares more affordable
                    ✔ Buybacks signal confidence from the company
                    ✔ Rights issues allow existing shareholders to buy cheaper shares
                    ✔ Corporate actions follow: Announcement Date → Ex-Date → Record Date

                    Understanding corporate actions helps investors make better decisions, track eligibility, and evaluate a company’s financial strategies.


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