Recent research has found a positive relationship between firm propensity to pay (PTP) and
retained-earnings-to-total-equity ratio (RE/TE). Motivated by a lifecycle theory of dividends,
researchers have interpreted RE/TE as a proxy for firm maturity stage. This paper shows that the
RE/TE ratios are surprisingly persistent. Consequently, while high-RE/TE firms always have a
high PTP, low-RE/TE firms (more than 40% of all firms actually start with a negative RE/TE)
always have a low PTP and typically do not pay dividends. We present a growth type
explanation for this cross-sectional persistence. Firms with low RE/TE ratios tend to be high
growth firms; low (and especially negative) RE/TE ratios reflect persistently heavy issues of new
equity and large R&D investments that pay off slowly—a phenomenon related to high growthtype,
consistent with the prediction by a generalized Myers-Majluf model. We postulate that
low-RE/TE firms, if they start paying dividends, may confuse the market and be pooled with
low-growth firms that usually pay dividends. Thus, the absence of dividend paying is consistent
with high growth-type and does not hinder the investment plans of low-RE/TE or high-growthtype
firms. We conclude that it is growth type and not lifecycle that best explains PTP
persistence.
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