Features
  
SAVE AND SHARE RSS

Dividend Trends
Written by Paul Amery  -  June 30, 2009 13:10 PM

 

IU_djStoxx600Oil_chart7

IU_djStoxx600Oil_chart8

 

Telecommunications and utilities companies remain a popular choice for defensive investors, and steady increases in dividends since 2005 have added a couple of percentage points in yield to both sectors, when measured against current share prices. Telecom stocks’ payouts have dipped a little recently, reflecting dividend cuts by some of the smaller index constituents, like Italia Telecom, but remain, in aggregate, near 6%.

 

IU_djStoxx600Oil_chart9

 

The financial sector has been the epicentre of the credit crunch, and the disappearing dividends of banks and other financial companies testify to their frantic attempts to conserve cash. The dividend yield on the DJ Stoxx European banks supersector index has fallen from 10%, when measured using the payouts of late 2007, to around 3% now. There’s room to wonder whether, with the recent rise in banks’ share prices, these stocks are really cheap any more. Other valuation metrics (price to book ratios, for example) may suggest so, but banks have relatively little yield support unless dividends start to pick up again quite quickly. The other three financial sectors show the same trend, but in a less extreme way.

 

IU_djStoxx600Oil_chart10

 

European technology stocks have given steadily increasing payouts over recent years, although in comparative terms this remains a relatively low-yielding sector. This is a partial legacy, perhaps, of the tech stock boom of 1999/2000, when dividends were considered old-fashioned and unnecessary. The recent drop in the payout ratio from over 3% to around 2%, when measured against current market prices, reflects Nokia’s first dividend cut in seven years, which was announced in January this year. Ericsson, the third-largest company in the sector, also cut its dividend in January.

Summary

Comparing dividend payment histories to current stock market prices for different European industrial sectors reveals a great variety of trends. Sectors differ substantially, both in terms of previous dividend trends, the absolute levels of yields and the variability of past distribution policies. Given the importance of dividends for long-term equity returns, these histories can offer a useful first check when assessing whether current equity market prices offer attractive valuations.

 



 

Latest comments on this feature


Post a Comment

Comment
(Limit 2,000
characters) 
*
Name: *
E-mail: *
Home page:

(optional)

Type in the displayed characters:
Email follow-up comments to my e-mail address
 
 
Be up-to-date


 

Related Features

  • Resource Shortage?
    Nov 18, 2009
    In which European equity sector have four of the five largest companies cut or scrapped dividends this year, while share prices have doubled?
  • Bread Vs. Cake Part II
    Oct 22, 2009
    John Serrapere of Arrow Insights adjusts his portfolio for the troubles to come. M&A funds, VIX ETNs and commodities are attractive.
  • Unpacking Global Sectors
    Nov 11, 2009
    Investors focusing solely on a domestic U.S. sector allocation strategy might be missing out.
  • The Next Big Thing: Emerging Asia
    Sep 23, 2009
    Cris Sholto Heaton’s recent article on investing in the small Asian countries outside China and India brings a welcome change to the usual run-of-the-mill emerging markets coverage.
  • Banks Top Sector ETF Inflows
    Oct 22, 2009