Tags: invest | dividend | advice | money
OPINION

The Most Important Dividend Advice You'll Ever Get

The Most Important Dividend Advice You'll Ever Get

Charles Sizemore By Tuesday, 29 December 2015 09:32 AM EST Current | Bio | Archive


In investing, as well as in most of life if something looks too good to be true, it probably is.

Nowhere is this more true than in the world of high-dividend stocks. A generation ago, investors looked to the bond market for income. That made sense when you could get a safe yield of 8% or higher. But at today’s puny yields, bonds aren’t going to cut it for most retirees. The 10-year Treasury yields about 2.25% as I’m writing this. That means you’d need to have $3.6 million invested just to generate an income of more than $75,000 per year.

Well, that’s a problem. Most retired investors don’t have $3.6 million. In fact, most don’t have one tenth of that. So they’ve been committing that cardinal sin of investing: They’re chasing yield in high-dividend-paying stocks.

Let’s say that you find a stock yielding a fat 10% in dividends. You can generate that same $75,000 with just $750,000 invested. Now, that’s still a lot of money, of course. But it’s a lot less than $3.6 million.

But there is a problem with this. Remember, bond interest is a contractual obligation. If the bondholder doesn’t pay you, you can sue them. And if they fall into bankruptcy, you are first in line to get paid.

Not so with dividends. A company can cut its dividend at any time at the discretion of the board of directors. And as an investor, there’s not a thing you can do about it.

Dividends get slashed all the time. According to Street Insider, 837 companies have cut or eliminated their dividend in this year alone, including large players like Freeport McMoran. As recently as August, Freeport McMoran was yielding nearly 10%. Well, that was before they slashed the quarterly payout to just $0.05 per share. Earlier this year, the payout was $0.313 per share.

I’m not going to tell you to dump all of your dividend-paying stocks. But I am going to give you some advice on how to better think about dividends.

To start, longevity and growth are far more important than current yield. The longer a stock has paid a dividend, the less likely it is that that dividend will be cut. There can always be a crisis that comes out of the blue – think the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill that clobbered BP (BP) – but if a company has managed to pay and grow its dividend for multiple consecutive decades, this is a company that can likely survive a zombie apocalypse.

The next point to remember is the payout ratio. This can be defined differently for different types of stocks (for example, REITs and MLPs use different accounting terminology), but the concept is the same. A healthy company should be paying out considerably less in dividends than it takes in as earnings and cash flow. It’s not sustainable for a company to pay out more than it takes in. Yet I never cease to be amazed by how investors routinely get suckered into yield traps like these.

So, if you want a durable income portfolio to tide you over in retirement, repeat after me:
  •     Don’t chase yield!
  •     Dividends are riskier than bond interest
  •     A company can’t pay out more than it takes in forever.

Trust me, you’ll thank me later.

Charles Lewis Sizemore, CFA, is chief investment officer of the investment firm Sizemore Capital Management and the author of the Sizemore Insights blog. As of this writing, he was long AAPL and MSFT. To read more of his work, CLICK HERE NOW.

Disclaimers: If I mention a stock favorably, you should assume that I have a position in it, both personally and in client accounts.  This does not, however, automatically mean that you should own it. I am expressing my opinions in this newsletter, not offering individualized financial advice or soliciting you to buy securities.  See full disclaimer here.

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CharlesSizemore
In investing, as well as in most of life if something looks too good to be true, it probably is.
invest, dividend, advice, money
650
2015-32-29
Tuesday, 29 December 2015 09:32 AM
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