Sailing Around Hazards En Route to Dividend Stocks
When the market's rocky, shares with regular dividends can anchor your portfolio
-- Stocks that consistently pay dividends can be a great way to generate investment income, especially in down markets like the current one. Everyone from the ultra-rich to retirees on a fixed income can take comfort in dividends--regular payments that companies make to shareholders out of net profits.
In the long term, dividends can make a great difference in total investment returns. A study by Morgan Stanley’s Adam Parker showed that from 1930 through 2012, dividends accounted for 41.8 percent of total return of the S&P 500.
In making the journey to the right dividend stocks, there are numerous hazards you must steer around. As some companies boost dividends to attract investors, the high payments may be the best reason not to buy these stocks.
Here are some things to consider:
Actually, dividend yield is the last thing to look at when assessing a stock. Yet many individual investors are fixated on it. Invariably, if a stock’s yield is high, it’s too good to be true. The beauty of high yields is like the beauty of the sirens that lured Ulysses and his crew to crash their boat on the rocks—alluring yet dangerous.
Generally, a dividend yield that's 3 percentage points or higher than the average of stocks in a given sector is sign of peril. Some people find stocks with high yields a good value precisely because of the low share prices that push up the dividend yield. But think about it: Why would the company’s directors declare a high dividend if they didn’t need to attract investors to their battered shares? And why aren’t they using the cash to grow the business?
It's okay to seek higher dividends, as long as they’re healthy. But if dividends are high, you want to be sure the company has a reasonable dividend yield and a low payout ratio.
It’s important to evaluate the payout ratio according to the type of company involved. Younger, faster-growing companies tend to pay low or no dividends because they’re reinvesting heavily. Utilities’ dividends are usually higher because they typically pay most of their earnings as a dividend, as their needs for growth are less and they upgrade equipment gradually.
If you don’t want to do this research, consider a dividend-stock ETF (exchange traded fund). These function basically like index funds, so they mirror the performance of a set portfolio of dividend stocks.
By following these guidelines, you’ll be better equipped to avoid the pitfall of imprudently chasing high dividends, and more likely to succeed in reaping good long-term returns in both share price and dividends. By the way, dividends are taxed at a lower rate than other types of income and can even be tax-free if you’re in a low bracket.
Any opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author.
Dave Sheaff Gilreath is a founding principal of Sheaff Brock Investment Advisors LLC. He has more than 30 years of experience in the financial services industry, beginning with Bache Halsey Stuart Shields and later Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. At Sheaff Brock, he shares responsibility for setting investment policy, asset allocation and security selection for the company's managed accounts. He also consults with the clients on portfolio construction. Gilreath received his Certified Financial Planner® (CFP) designation in 1984. He attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, where he earned a B.S. degree.