A shareholder once called days after a dividend payment had been completed.
“I bought the shares before the announcement of the dividend payment date by the company,” he said. “Why didn’t I receive the dividend?”
The dividend had been declared weeks earlier. However, entitlement was determined by the record date, not the announcement.
In capital markets, entitlement is not determined by intention; it is determined by dates. Understanding how key market dates work is essential to dividend income and other corporate actions (Bonus issue, rights issue, etc) participation.
Here are the dates that matter most.
1. Declaration Date – When the Clock Starts
This is when a company announces a dividend amount, payment date and the critical dates that follow. However, entitlement does not begin here.
2. Qualification Date – Who Is Qualified?
This is the decisive date. Only shareholders whose names appear on the register as at the qualification date are entitled to receive the declared dividend or participate in any corporate action. Buying shares after the qualification window closes means missing out. For issuers and registrars, this date triggers intensive reconciliation activity. For shareholders, it determines outcome.
3. Payment Date – When Value Is Realised
The payment date is when dividends are paid to shareholders. For shareholders, it affects liquidity and yield timing. For registrars, it represents a high-volume operational window requiring accurate mandates and validated records. Incorrect bank account details or failure to mandate a share account may delay receipt of payments, reinforcing the importance of maintaining up-to-date information well before dividend payment cycles begin.
4. Closing Date of a Register
This refers to the specific date set by a company when its register of shareholders is temporarily closed in order to determine which shareholders are entitled to certain rights or benefits. During this period, no transactional updates are made to the shareholder register, meaning transfers of shares or changes in ownership will not be processed until the register reopens.
“I bought the shares before the announcement of the dividend payment date by the company,” he said. “Why didn’t I receive the dividend?”
The dividend had been declared weeks earlier. However, entitlement was determined by the record date, not the announcement.
In capital markets, entitlement is not determined by intention; it is determined by dates. Understanding how key market dates work is essential to dividend income and other corporate actions (Bonus issue, rights issue, etc) participation.
Here are the dates that matter most.
1. Declaration Date – When the Clock Starts
This is when a company announces a dividend amount, payment date and the critical dates that follow. However, entitlement does not begin here.
2. Qualification Date – Who Is Qualified?
This is the decisive date. Only shareholders whose names appear on the register as at the qualification date are entitled to receive the declared dividend or participate in any corporate action. Buying shares after the qualification window closes means missing out. For issuers and registrars, this date triggers intensive reconciliation activity. For shareholders, it determines outcome.
3. Payment Date – When Value Is Realised
The payment date is when dividends are paid to shareholders. For shareholders, it affects liquidity and yield timing. For registrars, it represents a high-volume operational window requiring accurate mandates and validated records. Incorrect bank account details or failure to mandate a share account may delay receipt of payments, reinforcing the importance of maintaining up-to-date information well before dividend payment cycles begin.
4. Closing Date of a Register
This refers to the specific date set by a company when its register of shareholders is temporarily closed in order to determine which shareholders are entitled to certain rights or benefits. During this period, no transactional updates are made to the shareholder register, meaning transfers of shares or changes in ownership will not be processed until the register reopens.