Together with its share buyback worth Rs 16,000 crore completed in January this year, TCS shareholders will receive a record Rs 30,250 crore from their company in FY21.
Tata
Consultancy Services, the Tata group cash cow and India’s largest IT services
company, will make another record this year.
With its final dividend for
FY21 of Rs 15 per share announced on Monday, TCS will make the biggest ever
cash reward to its shareholders in a financial year.
Together with its share
buyback worth Rs 16,000 crore completed in January this year, TCS shareholders
will receive a record Rs 30,250 crore from their company in FY21.
The company is
paying total equity dividend of Rs 38 per share translating into total pay-out
of around Rs 14,000 crore for FY21.
This is likely to make TCS
the country’s top dividend payer for second-year in a row.
This way, TCS will break
its FY20 record when it returned nearly Rs 27,400 crore to its shareholders by
way of equity dividend, becoming the top dividend payer in the country.
It was followed by ITC,
which had paid around Rs 12,500 crore as equity dividend to its shareholders
(see chart).
With its latest pay-out,
TCS has returned a record Rs 1.2 trillion to its shareholders in the last five
years and Rs 1.6 trillion in the last 10 years.
In FY20, TCS accounted for
nearly 15 per cent of the dividend paid by the listed companies in the country.
Tata Sons will earn nearly
Rs 22,000 crore from TCS by way of dividend and share buyback, given its 72 per
cent stake in the company.
The latest cash bonanza
from TCS will provide a boost to Tata Sons’ profitability and balance sheet in
FY21.
The holding company has
been forced to raise loans in recent years to provide equity support to large
group companies and fund losses of the group telecom and aviation business.
The Tatas have also forayed
into e-commerce by acquiring Big Basket and the cash from TCS will come in
handy to fund the initial losses suffered by the e-commerce venture.
Some analysts, however,
worry that a large pay-out by TCS will deplete its cash reserves, which could
restrict its financial headroom and reduce its ability to grow and enter new
segments by way of large acquisitions.
The worry stems from a
steady slowdown in the company’s revenue and profit growth in recent years.
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