Are Dividend Stocks Tax-Efficient? 5 Picks by the Financial Media

2. Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS)

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) is one of the dividend stocks picked by financial media as investors ask whether dividend stocks are tax-efficient. On June 24, Morgan Stanley said it would increase its quarterly common stock dividend to $1.15 per share from $1.00, beginning with the dividend expected to be declared in the third quarter. The firm also reauthorized a multi-year common equity share repurchase program of up to $20 billion without a set expiration date.

The update offers one of the cleaner tax-efficiency examples because it combines a dividend increase with buybacks. The dividend can generally qualify for preferential U.S. dividend tax rates when holding-period rules are met, but it still creates taxable income when paid. The repurchase authorization can be more tax-efficient for continuing shareholders because it may return capital through share-count reduction and per-share value rather than immediate cash distributions. That does not make the stock tax-free or risk-free. Bank capital rules, market activity, credit conditions, and wealth-management flows still shape the business case behind the payout.

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) is a global financial services firm providing investment banking, securities, wealth management, and investment management services.

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