Agree with your reasoning KM. I think the OP's query was simply asking at what point APT hit its ceiling and will it pay dividends at that point in time. For companies like Berkshire, you could argue it never has a ceiling because it can invest "forever", but most businesses will hit some type of ceiling at some point and make the decision that surplus cash is better off paid back to investors. That's why Berkshire can get away with not paying divvies and other companies cannot.
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