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Fundamental data is updated weekly, as of the prior weekend. Please download the Full Report and Dividend Report for any changes.
Jan 12, 2024
UnitedHealth Group Still a Free-Cash-Flow Generating Machine
Image: UnitedHealth Group continues to drive strong revenue and operating earnings performance. Image Source: UnitedHealth Group. On January 12, healthcare benefits provider UnitedHealth Group reported strong fourth-quarter 2023 results that showed revenue advancing 14% on a year-over-year basis thanks to strength at its UnitedHealthcare and Optum divisions, while earnings from operations advanced 11.6%. UnitedHealth is facing some temporary cost pressures in its business due to pent-up demand for discretionary procedures following the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, but its net margin held up fine in the period, coming in at 5.8%, the same level a year ago. Management reaffirmed its previously-issued 2024 guidance, and we continue to like UnitedHealth Group as a key weighting in the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio. Shares yield ~1.4% at the time of this writing.
Jan 12, 2024
Dividend Increases/Decreases for the Week of January 12
Let's take a look at firms raising/lowering their dividends this week.
Jan 11, 2024
Dividend King Leggett & Platt’s Payout May Be Worth the Risk
Image: Leggett & Platt has put together a long track record of consecutive annual dividend increases, but recent performance suggests that the dividend may be at risk in the longer run. Its 7.1% dividend yield may be worth the risk, however. Leggett & Platt has raised its dividend for more than 50 consecutive years, putting it in the coveted category of being a Dividend King. However, the bedding, flooring and textile product maker has fallen on some difficult times. The company sports a Dividend Cushion ratio of -1.2 (negative 1.2), indicating that our future expectations of its dividend payments over the next five years coupled with its net debt position fall far below the cumulative free cash flow that we expect it to generate over the next five years. The company's 7.1% dividend yield may be worth the risk, however.
Jan 10, 2024
Best Ideas Visa, Alphabet Hit 52-Week Highs
Image: The top weightings in Valuentum’s Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio just hit 52-week highs. The first week of trading in 2024 gave investors some pause, as it was filled with profit taking from a strong 2023, but we think this bull market continues to have legs. We’ve outlined 12 reasons as to why we think investors should stay aggressive during 2024, and while key inflation data looms, we continue to like how the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio is positioned heading into what could be another strong year in 2024. Visa and Alphabet remain two of our favorite ideas on the market today, and we point to the high end of their respective fair value estimate ranges as reasonable targets for optimistic, risk-seeking investors.
Jan 8, 2024
Boeing In Negative Headlines Again; Part of 737 Max Fuselage Blows Out During Commercial Flight
Image: Boeing's shares have been quite volatile the past couple years. On January 6, Boeing received some more bad news. Part of a fuselage installed on one of its new eight-week old 737 Max 9 aircraft blew out on an Alaska Airlines flight. Boeing had been working hard to get back on track with customer perception of the safety of its 737 MAX line-up, and we view the incident as yet another hiccup in the firm’s relations with the public.
Jan 8, 2024
Thinking Slow: 3 Research Blind Spots That Changed the Investment World
Image Source: EpicTop10.com. We have to be on high alert about how our minds work. PBS recently delivered a four-part series examining how easily our minds are being hacked, and why it is so important to "think slow." When it comes to the active versus passive debate, does the analysis suffer from parameter risk? With respect to empirical, evidence-based analysis, does the analysis have the entire construct wrong? When it comes to short-cut multiples, are we falling into the behavioral trap of thinking on autopilot?
Jan 6, 2024
In the News: Apple, Nvidia, ANSYS
The first week of trading in the new year wasn't very welcome, but we think it is far too early to draw any conclusions about how the rest of the year will be. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and NASDAQ faced selling pressure in the first week due in part to investors waiting until the new year to book the huge gains garnered during 2023. The market continues to digest critical employment data, as it watches movements in the 10-year Treasury closely, a key benchmark rate for asset pricing that now stands just north of 4%. Many bulls are saying 2024 may be a difficult year after the worst start in the S&P 500 for a new year since 2008, but we remain bullish on our positioning in the newsletter portfolios.
Jan 5, 2024
Dividend Increases/Decreases for the Week of January 5
Let's take a look at firms raising/lowering their dividends this week.
Jan 4, 2024
It’s All About Free Cash Flow – Walgreens Cuts Its Payout
Image: Walgreens’ shares have been under consistent pressure for years, and a turnaround is not guaranteed. Today, January 4, Walgreens announced that it would slash its quarterly dividend payment to $0.25 per share, a 48% decrease. This should not be surprising to members. Walgreens’ Dividend Cushion ratio stood at -0.3 (negative 0.3), and we hope members have avoided this catastrophe of a Dividend Aristocrat. A Dividend Cushion ratio below 1 signals increased long-term risk to the payout, while a firmly negative Dividend Cushion ratio signals heightened risk. Our cash-based dividend growth process has led to outperformance in the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio the past couple years, while other areas have suffered, and it has also shown to be useful in predicting dividend cuts. Walgreens is now one of more than 50 companies across our coverage universe in recent years where the Dividend Cushion ratio has warned of significant risk to the sustainability of the dividend in advance of the cut.
Jan 4, 2024
4 Very Good Reasons Why We Don’t Like Dividends of Banking Stocks
Image: Bank Run in Michigan, USA, February 1933. Source: Public Domain. It’s sometimes easy to lose sight of the fragility of a banking firm’s business model. Let’s examine the reasons why we don’t like banking firms’ dividends. Reason #1: A Bank Run Is Always Possible. Reason #2: Others Have Tried to Invest in Bank Dividends and Have Failed. Reason #3: Cash Flow Is Not Meaningful at Banks. Reason #4: There Are Plenty of Other Options. Let's dig in.



The High Yield Dividend Newsletter, Best Ideas Newsletter, Dividend Growth Newsletter, Nelson Exclusive publication, and any reports, articles and content found on this website are for information purposes only and should not be considered a solicitation to buy or sell any security. The sources of the data used on this website are believed by Valuentum to be reliable, but the data’s accuracy, completeness or interpretation cannot be guaranteed. Valuentum is not responsible for any errors or omissions or for results obtained from the use of its newsletters, reports, commentary, or publications and accepts no liability for how readers may choose to utilize the content. Valuentum is not a money manager, is not a registered investment advisor and does not offer brokerage or investment banking services. Valuentum, its employees, and affiliates may have long, short or derivative positions in the stock or stocks mentioned on this site.