Young Optics Inc. engages in the research, design, manufacture, and sale of optical components, engines, and modules in Taiwan. The company offers plastic injection molds; machining parts, including metal barrel, spacer, retainer, cam ring, and flange products; components, such as plastic lens, glass molding lens, glass grinding lens, color wheels, glass light tunnels, reflection prisms, color filters, x-plates, mirrors, UVIR, and waveguide products; DLP evaluation modules, and DLP LED and UV engines; machine vision, projection, logo, smart head, ADAS, lidar, endoscope, fixed, and varifocal lens; and monocular HMD products. Young Optics Inc. was founded in 2002 and is based in Hsinchu, Taiwan.
Young Optics Dividend Announcement
• Young Optics announced a annually dividend of NT$0.50 per ordinary share which will be made payable on 2019-08-26. Ex dividend date: 2019-07-22
• Young Optics's trailing twelve-month (TTM) dividend yield is -%
Young Optics Dividend History
Ex-Div date | Dividend amount | Dividend type | Pay date |
---|---|---|---|
2019-07-22 | NT$0.50 | annually | 2019-08-26 |
2016-07-14 | NT$0.56 | annually | |
2015-07-01 | NT$1.48 | annually | |
2014-07-15 | NT$1.88 | annually | |
2013-07-08 | NT$2.10 | annually | |
2012-07-04 | NT$3.90 | annually | |
2011-07-04 | NT$3.75 | annually | |
2010-07-19 | NT$2.61 | annually | |
2009-07-20 | NT$3.26 | annually | |
2008-08-29 | NT$2.49 | annually | |
2007-08-01 | NT$1.14 | annually |
Young Optics Dividend per year
Young Optics Dividend growth
Young Optics Dividend Yield
Young Optics current trailing twelve-month (TTM) dividend yield is -%. Interested in purchasing Young Optics stock? Use our calculator to estimate your expected dividend yield:
Young Optics Financial Ratios
Young Optics Dividend FAQ
1. Growth opportunities: Companies, especially in fast-growing industries like technology, reinvest earnings into expansion, R&D, or acquisitions to fuel future growth and increase company value.
2. Tax implications: Not paying dividends can reduce the tax burden on shareholders, who may prefer to defer taxes until selling shares and realizing capital gains.
3. Investor preferences: Some investors prefer companies to reinvest profits for higher long-term returns, particularly those seeking capital appreciation over income.
4. Capital allocation priorities: Companies may allocate cash to pay down debt, fund share buybacks, or invest in projects with higher returns than dividends.
5. Market expectations: In certain sectors, like technology, reinvesting profits for growth and innovation is often prioritized over distributing dividends to shareholders.
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