Quote from Nofear777:
Now the next part of my post goes to the other more civilized posters on elitetrader.com.
Lets say a stock never changes in price for 10 years and there are no trades in it. It has a perfect flat line for the stock price not counting the dividend.
It does have a dividend. From what I understand the stock price would decline with respect to the dividend, that is, if the dividend is 30 cents per quarter the stock price in this theoreticaly otherwise flat price would decline by 30 cents a quarter?
I'll cut you some slack.
Let's change your question slightly. Let's say the stock constantly trades at cash value and has a dividend. So each time the stock goes ex-dividend the price would drop by the amount of the dividend. But between that time and the next dividend date the price would gradually increase as cash is accumulated again.
In the real world, stocks do the same thing, but it isn't as obvious because of all the market noise and because they don't trade at cash value.