I like having a dividend. A company like NVDA forces shareholder returns to the whim of the market price, but dividends stabilize things because the stock is actually tangibly worth something. It also forces a certain discipline in the company, since shareholders don't like dividends getting cut. It also limits empire-building, di-worsification, and "good ideas" that have questionable ROI.
> A company like NVDA forces shareholder returns to the whim of the market price, but dividends stabilize things because the stock is actually tangibly worth something.
All of the whims that go into the market price are still there. If you're a shareholder who doesn't care about the share price you're going to have a bad time.
> It also forces a certain discipline in the company, since shareholders don't like dividends getting cut.
Which usually leads to mismanagement more than anything because the company gets into a situation where they should lower the dividend but is under pressure not to and then starts eating their seed corn so they can still pay the dividend.
> It also limits empire-building, di-worsification, and "good ideas" that have questionable ROI.