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Investors do not demand that companies pay a dividend, and prefer companies do not issue a dividend, when the company is growing rapidly. Investors would prefer to keep that cash in the business, to use as fuel for further growth. Recently, Alphabet and Google revenue growth has been around or above 20% per year. Take a look at their Q4 2017 earnings statement [1]. Here is a table based on figures in Item 6: 2013 $55,519,000
2014 $66,001,000
2015 $74,989,000 (+14% YoY)
2016 $90,272,000 (+20% YoY)
2017 $110,855,000 (+23% YoY)
Compare to the net operating revenue of a company like Coca-Cola [2], which pays about $1.50 dividend per share per year on a price of about $0-47 per share: 2013 $46,854,000
2014 $45,998,000
2015 $44,294,000
2016 $41,863,000
Most investors in companies like Google expect to get more return by keeping cash within the business to use for growth, resulting in share appreciation, than they would get by receiving a dividend. If growth slows or stops then investor sentiment will change. There are other figures to consider, but these figures represent significant growth for a company of Google's size.Madoff's business was a scam and pyramid scheme that depended on a steady stream of new investors to pay off his old investors. Google and Coca-cola operate real businesses that collect revenue from paying customers; Google's is growing rapidly while Coke is holding steady or declining. There's no similarity to Madoff. [1] https://abc.xyz/investor/ [2] https://s22.q4cdn.com/984101753/files/doc_financials/annual_... |
Viewed as an advertiser (Google's real customers), I would like this number to come down over time.