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RAIT Financial: Dividend Dynamo or the Next Blowup?

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Dividend investing is a tried-and-true strategy for generating strong, steady returns in economies both good and bad. But as corporate America's slew of dividend cuts and suspensions over the past few years has demonstrated, it's not enough simply to buy a high yield. You also need to make sure those payouts are sustainable.

Let's examine how RAIT Financial (NYSE: RAS  ) stacks up in four critical areas to determine whether it's a dividend dynamo or a disaster in the making.

1. Yield
First and foremost, dividend investors like a large forward yield. But if a yield gets too high, it may reflect investors' doubts about the payout's sustainability. If investors had confidence in the stock, they'd be buying it, driving up the share price and shrinking the yield.

RAIT Financial yields 6.5%, considerably higher than the S&P's 1.9%.

2. Payout ratio
The payout ratio might be the most important metric for judging dividend sustainability. It compares the amount of money a company paid out in dividends last year to the earnings it generated. A ratio that's too high -- say, greater than 80% of earnings -- indicates that the company may be stretching to make payouts it can't afford, even when its dividend yield doesn't seem particularly high.

The payout ratio is somewhat less important when evaluating real estate investment trusts like RAIT Financial, because they are required to pay out at least 90% of their earnings in the form of dividends in order to avoid paying corporate income taxes.

3. Balance sheet
The best dividend payers have the financial fortitude to fund growth and respond to whatever the economy and competitors throw at them. The debt-to-equity ratio is a good measure of a company's total debt burden. We can also look at interest payments as a percentage of interest revenue for a quick way to gauge how comfortably these REITs can afford to make their interest payments.

Let's examine how RAIT Financial stacks up next to its peers:

Company

Debt-to-Equity Ratio

Interest Payments/Interest Revenue

RAIT Financial Trust

212%

61%

Resource Capital (NYSE: RSO  )

344%

31%

Starwood Property Trust (Nasdaq: STWD  )

43%

17%

Redwood Trust (NYSE: RWT  )

400%

41%

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

4. Growth
A large dividend is nice; a large growing dividend is even better. To support a growing dividend, we also want to see earnings growth.

Over the past five years, RAIT's earnings per share have declined at an annual rate of 34%. Its dividend has declined at a 54% rate.

The Foolish bottom line
The economic contraction is a tricky environment for commercial REITs. In particular, RAIT Financial's trailing-twelve-month interest revenue has been declining since December 2007. Of course, with shares having also declined significantly, the stock provides a generous yield. Dividend investors will want to keep an eye on the company's interest income and credit quality to ensure that it's able to continue generating those big payouts.

To stay up-to-speed on the top news and analysis on RAIT Financial or any other stock, add it to your stock watchlist. If you don't have one yet, you can create a watchlist of your favorite stocks by clicking here.

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Ilan Moscovitz doesn't own shares of any companies mentioned. You can follow him on Twitter @TMFDada. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley 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 22, 2011, at 12:01 PM, yazzbro wrote:

    RAIT hardly pays any dividends to its common stock share holders. If you are a preferred stock holder than you are getting a dividend. RAS is not going anywhere unless it can start giving more regular dividend payments to its common stock holders. RAS splitting its stock in hopes to get investors who only by stocks worth $5 an over has failed miserably also. This stock right after the the split shot up to around $7. Now it is right back into the mid $3 range and is continuing to fall. It wont shock me to see it settle right where it started before it split. Here is the thing though, RAS is doing a Hell of a lot better than it was a couple years ago. This company looked like it was on the edge of the abyss when it righted the ship. It got rid of a lot of its toxic assets. It streamlined its portfolio. Its rental properties are 80% occupied. Its retail properties are not doing bad either. I just think it is going to take some time before RAIT gets back to form. This stock is a long term hold(3-5 years). You are not going to get a lot in the way of dividends right now. I really think RAIT's worst days are behind it though. A couple more good quarters and this stock should be back in the $6 range. Being Patient with RAS I think is the key right now. We will see.

  • Report this Comment On August 22, 2011, at 1:58 PM, mikala211 wrote:

    WHY IS RSO DECLINING

  • Report this Comment On August 24, 2011, at 2:55 PM, dragonshonT3 wrote:

    Mikala211,

    If you're asking why RSO is declining on the day you asked, then it is declining not due to fundamentals but because of systematic (entire market) downturn. Just a thought.

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:00 PM
RAS $4.11 Down +0.00 +0.00%
RAIT Financial Tru… CAPS Rating: *****
RWT $12.37 Down -0.09 -0.72%
Redwood Trust, Inc… CAPS Rating: **
RSO $5.22 Up +0.02 +0.38%
Resource Capital C… CAPS Rating: ****

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