Dividend investors know that it pays to follow how much of a company's money goes toward funding its payouts. A nice yield now won't matter much if the company can't keep making those payments going forward.

Here, we'll highlight a given company and its closest competitors to see just how safe their dividends are, with a little help from three crucial tools:

  • The interest coverage ratio, or earnings before interest and taxes, divided by interest expense. The interest coverage ratio measures a company's ability to pay the interest on its debt. An interest coverage ratio less than 1.5 is questionable; a number less than 1 means that the company is not bringing in enough money to cover its interest expenses.
  • The EPS payout ratio, or dividends per share divided by earnings per share. The EPS payout ratio measures the percentage of earnings that go toward paying the dividend. A ratio greater than 80% is worrisome.
  • The FCF payout ratio, or dividends per share divided by free cash flow per share. Earnings alone don't always paint a complete picture of a business' health. The FCF payout ratio measures the percentage of free cash flow devoted toward paying the dividend. Again, a ratio greater than 80% could be a red flag.

Each of these ratios reflect dividends paid in the trailing 12 months; yields are the expected forward yield. Let's examine  Silver Wheaton (NYSE: SLW) and three of its peers.

Company

Yield

Interest Coverage

EPS Payout Ratio

FCF Payout Ratio

Silver Wheaton 0.4% N/A 4.3% 12.8%
Silvercorp Metals (NYSE: SVM) 1% 1954.0 17% 23.5%
Royal Gold (Nasdaq: RGLD) 0.7% 15.4 34.1% NM
Franco Nevada (NYSE: FNV) 1.3% 75.8 39.5% 31.7%

 Source: S&P Capital IQ.

Silver Wheaton has no debt and as such has no interest to cover. Given that its EPS payout ratio and FCF payout ratio are below 15%, you shouldn't have to worry that Cliffs will need to cut its dividend anytime soon.

Another tool for better investing
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