Retention ratio
The retention ratio is the share of a company's earnings kept in the business rather than paid out as dividends: one minus the payout ratio, also called the plowback ratio.
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A company reports earnings per share of €4.00 and pays an annual dividend of €1.20 per share. The payout ratio is €1.20 ÷ €4.00 = 30%, so the retention ratio is 1 − 0.30 = 70%: for every euro earned, the company keeps €0.70 and pays out €0.30.
Where it fits
SubjectCorporate FinanceCoreTopicDividend Policy & PayoutCore
The formula
LaTeX
Variables
- Retention ratio (ratio)
- Dividends per share (€ per share)
- Earnings per share (€ per share)
Gives the fraction of each period's earnings kept in the business rather than paid out as dividends.
Check yourself
PracticeCORE
A company reports earnings per share of €6.00 and pays an annual dividend of €2.10 per share. What is the company's retention ratio?
Select an answer to check your understanding.