These Dividends Are Done

Recs

34

It's been a scary year for dividend investors.

Even with the recent rally, dividend yields are sky-high. According to Capital IQ, there are 1,175 stocks on our major exchanges with yields of 5% or more. But many of these are dividend traps, enticing us with the promise of fat quarterly payouts, only to cut them down the road.

As a stark reminder, we can look to General Electric. Once hailed as the safest of the safe, GE has in short succession received government help, cut its dividend to save cash and (hopefully) retain its AAA debt rating, and then lost that AAA status anyway.

More examples abound, from Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) to amusement-park operator Cedar Fair (NYSE: FUN) to just about any big bank that comes to mind.

The "5% of nothing" club
Traditionally, a 5% dividend yield has been eye-popping enough to elicit fears of a dividend cut. Now, it feels commonplace. When you see a blue chip like Kraft creeping up on a 5% yield, anything short of double digits starts to feel safe. And we start getting a little greedy.

But that greed can turn right back into fear if the great double-whammy curse of high-yielding stocks kicks in. After all, we buy dividend stocks because they provide a large, steady stream of income and have the promise of stock price appreciation. But then:

  • In this environment, a susceptible high-yielding company's share price takes a beating. (Whammy!)
  • To preserve precious capital, said company cuts or altogether eliminates its dividend, destroying dreams in the process. (Double-whammy!)

As a result, I view any dividend yield as a "too good to be true" situation until I've fully vetted the company. It's a good default stance on any stock you're considering buying. Let's take a quick look at some companies with 5%-plus dividends:

Company

Dividend Yield

Payout Ratio

AT&T (NYSE: T)

6.4%

80%

Altria (NYSE: MO)

7.3%

82%

Pitney Bowes (NYSE: PBI)

6.5%

75%

United Online (Nasdaq: UNTD)

5.3%

Negative

Horizon Lines (NYSE: HRZ)

8.5%

Negative

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard and Poor's.

The story behind the numbers
The first thing I do when I see a tasty dividend is look for obvious problem areas. If I can spot a major problem quickly, it saves me further research.

Notice the payout ratios (the percentage of earnings a company pays out in dividends) in the table above. If I see a payout ratio greater than 50%, I get suspicious. When the payout ratio goes above 100%, that means dividends aren't currently being covered by earnings.

Worse than a payout ratio greater than 100% is one that is negative -- that is, the company is paying out dividends despite reporting a loss.

So while I would certainly look closely at the quality of earnings of the three companies with payout ratios above 50% before investing in their stocks, I would be even more skeptical of the dividend sustainability of the two companies (United Online and Horizon Lines) with negative payout ratios.

Now, keep in mind that the payout ratio is just one metric. It's certainly useful for screening purposes, but further research fills in the picture. For instance, those making the bull case for United Online and Horizon Lines would point to each company's positive free cash flow as evidence of dividend sustainability.  

Which dividends will survive?
It's darn hard to determine the sustainability of dividends in this environment. Due diligence is important in any environment, but it's especially important now, when we can scoop up high-dividend plays that could form the core of our portfolios for decades to come.

The folks at our Income Investor newsletter do their homework. They look for the most stable companies that pay the highest, most sustainable dividend yields. They actually recently took Kraft off their list of recommendations, not because it's a bad company, but because they see better opportunities out there. For new money, they rank six sustainable dividend-paying stocks as "buy first" candidates. You can see all six, and try out the entire service, for free with a 30-day trial. Click here to learn more -- there's no obligation to subscribe.

This article was originally published on May 7, 2009. It has been updated.

Anand Chokkavelu owns shares in Altria. In his spare time, he hosts a snack-food program called "These Doritos Are Done." Pitney Bowes is a Motley Fool Income Investor recommendation.The Fool has a disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On August 13, 2009, at 4:53 PM, greenwave3 wrote:

    MO will always pay a dividend. I doubt it will ever be much richer than it is now, but management will sell whatever parts of their souls that remain unsold to secure that dividend.

  • Report this Comment On August 14, 2009, at 8:26 AM, intbslt wrote:

    I am trying to figure out how you got to a negative dividend payout ratio for UNTD but can't get there based on any of their earnings reports. Is this a mistake?

    UNTD declared a 10 cent quarterly dividend and GAAP earnings last quarter were 21 cents. In the last 2 quarters, UNTD declared 2 x 10 cent dividends (20 cents) and their GAAP earnings were 41 cents per share.

    What's more is that last quarter, UNTD reported 36.3m net income but generated roughly 64m in free cash flow. In the prior year quarter, UNTD reported 26.7m net income but 58m FCF. Therefore, if you look at UNTD's payout ratio based on earnings, they're at around 50% (not negative). If you look at their ability to cover dividends with cash generated from the business the ratio is even lower.

  • Report this Comment On August 14, 2009, at 3:13 PM, fmpartners wrote:

    Concerning UNTD, your article states==>When the payout ratio goes above 100%, that means dividends aren't currently being covered by earnings.

    My understanding is that dividends are paid from cash flow not earnings, earnings are a result of the paid dividend NOT a determining factor if the dividend is paid.

    StockClub.TheFutureWay.com has had this stock as a holding for many quarters, and successfully received the payout. However, a tremendous hit to market value has recently occurred during the past few weeks, which inadvertantly will raise the yield percentage of the dividend.

  • Report this Comment On August 20, 2009, at 4:30 PM, cfbader wrote:

    Phillip Morris has never cut their dividend. I have owned this stock through the dark days in the late 90's when the market thought tabacco was done. MO was yielding over 15 per cent and R J Reynolds dividend approached 25 per cent (look it up). Buy MO now, they will be raising their dividend before school starts.

Add your comment.

Compare Brokers

TD AMERITRADE
more info
ShareBuilder
more info
Power E*Trade

more info
Scottrade
more info
Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 963744, ~/Articles/ArticleHandler.aspx, 12/1/2009 11:23:38 AM

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

The Must-Read Story on Fool.com
The Public Health-Care Plan's Problem

Related Tickers

12/1/2009 11:07 AM
T $27.07 Up +0.13 +0.48%
AT&T, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
FUN $8.43 Up +0.18 +2.18%
Cedar Fair, L.P. CAPS Rating: **
DOW $27.93 Up +0.15 +0.54%
The Dow Chemical C… CAPS Rating: ****
HRZ $5.38 Up +0.03 +0.56%
Horizon Lines, Inc… CAPS Rating: ***
UNTD $6.90 Up +0.10 +1.47%
United Online, Inc… CAPS Rating: ***
MO $19.06 Up +0.25 +1.33%
Altria Group, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
PBI $23.02 Down -0.02 -0.09%
Pitney Bowes, Inc. CAPS Rating: ***

Community: Investing Wiki

Term Of The Hour

PDUFA: The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) is a law enacted by Congress that gives powers to the FDA.

Want to learn more or edit this definition?
Click here to read more!