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Recent Articles
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Dividend Increases/Decreases for the Week of November 4
Nov 4, 2022
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Let's take a look at firms raising/lowering their dividends this week.
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Realty Income: An Outperformer in 2022
Nov 3, 2022
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 Image Source: Realty Income.
We continue to be impressed with Realty Income’s ability to keep raising its dividend payout, and while REIT economics have deteriorated in 2022, the company is doing much better than peers. We’re not fans of the capital-market dependence risk of REITs, in general, and Realty Income holds a rather elevated net debt to annualized pro forma adjusted EBITAre ratio of 5.2x, but we’re sticking with the company as an idea in the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio at this time. The company has raised its dividend 117 times since it was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1994.
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ALERT: Replacing Qualcomm with McDonald’s in Dividend Growth Newsletter Portfolio
Nov 3, 2022
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 Image: The semiconductor space is experiencing a number of headwinds, and while we still like Qualcomm’s long-term prospects, we’re replacing it with McDonald’s in the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio. Image Source: Qualcomm.
We’re huge fans of Qualcomm’s business model over the long haul, but risks continue to add up. First, the adjustment in the pace of Qualcomm’s expectations for handset volumes for calendar 2022 is rather concerning, given the delta from its commentary in July and over a period of what is only a couple months remaining this year. In light of U.S.-China geopolitical tensions, new export restrictions on chip technology to China (announced October 7) that are further complicating industry matters, and Qualcomm customers retrenching by drawing down on their inventory, we’re going to remove the small “position” in Qualcomm in the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio. McDonald’s will be taking its place in the portfolio. This change will be reflected in the next edition of the Dividend Growth Newsletter.
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Lumen’s Dividend Cut Highlights Effectiveness of Valuentum’s Dividend Methodology and Uniqueness of Dividend Cushion Ratio
Nov 3, 2022
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A lot of times investors only focus on the dividend payout ratio – dividends paid per share divided by earnings per share – or free cash flow coverage of the dividend, but the balance sheet is so very important to the sustainability of the dividend, too – something that the Dividend Cushion ratio embraces but other dividend health metrics do not. For example, Lumen’s dividend payout ratio was 50% ($0.75 in dividends dividend by $1.50 in earnings per share during the first three quarters of the year), and its free cash flow was enough to cover its cash dividends paid during the first nine months of 2022, too. However, the company held a massive ~$25 billion net debt position at the end of the quarter, which pushed its Dividend Cushion ratio deep into negative territory, raising a huge red flag with respect to the sustainability of the payout. Ignoring the balance sheet both with respect to intrinsic value and dividend analysis could be a recipe for disaster.
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