Alphabet’s board said Thursday the company would issue a 20 cent per share dividend, the company’s first ever, and had authorized the repurchase of up to $70 billion shares.
The company’s move comes after Meta’s board authorized its first ever dividend in February. Google’s parent company had $108 billion in cash and marketable securities on hand as of March 31, 2024.
Shares shot up 12% on the news, which was announced alongside better-than-expected first quarter earnings.
Alphabet authorized an identically-sized repurchase exactly one year ago, during a period of intense cost-cutting and layoffs.
The dividend is payable to all class of shares, including super-voting Class B shareholders, as well as non-voting Class C shareholders. Most Google investors own the company through Class A shares. All shareholders of record as of June 10 will receive the dividend the same month.
Co-founder Sergey Brin, who owns more than 730 million Class B and C shares, will receive a $146 million payout. Co-founder Larry Page, who owns 389 million Class B shares, will get a dividend payment of $78 million.
Investors have been looking for signs of maturity from technology firms. Every major technology firm announced layoffs and tightened spending beginning in 2022. Investors rewarded those efforts, and have shown a similar reaction to share buybacks and dividend initiations. When Meta announced its first ever dividend in February, it helped send shares soaring more than 14%.
Notably, Amazon has never issued a dividend, nor has it ever authorized a share buyback close to the size of Google’s. Amazon’s largest share repurchase, in 2022, was for up to $10 billion.
Amazon is slated to report first quarter earnings Tuesday.