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Entry Criteria: Current Dividend Yield and Dividend Growth Rate
#1
Yesterday I kicked off a series of threads discussing my entry criteria for a dividend growth stock by discussing the number of years a company has been raising its dividend. The next thing that I look at, the topic of today’s post, is the stock’s dividend growth, as measured by its current dividend yield and the dividend growth rate.

Just in case this is a new concept to you, the current dividend yield of a stock is simply the current amount of dividends (annualized) that the stock currently pays divided by the current price of the stock. For example, Aflac (AFL) currently pays $0.35 per share each quarter. That’s $1.40 annually for each share. The price is $51.64 as of Friday’s close. $1.40 divided by $51.64 is just about 2.7 percent. If a stock’s price does not move much, then the dividend yield increases when the dividend payout increases. Similarly, a rise in the stock price lowers the dividend yield, and a drop in the share price increases the yield. The dividend growth rate is just that: the rate at which the dividend grows year over year.

Many dividend growth investors have a minimum current dividend yield that they will accept when weighing DG stocks, often in the 2.5 to 3.5 percent range, with 3 percent being pretty common. Personally, I do not have a fixed minimum. As always, I think that each stock has to be evaluated on its own merits in light of all of the relevant factors. So I do have a few low-yielders in my portfolio. That said, I must admit to a pretty heavy bias toward stocks with a higher current dividend yield.

The current dividend yield of the stock and the rate at which the dividend grows year over year are the two main components of dividend growth. It is a rare stock indeed that has a high current yield and that is also growing the dividend at a fast pace year over year. One example of this is Lockheed Martin (LMT). Currently yielding a generous 5 percent (approximately), LMT has also been growing the dividend at an average rate of over 20 percent each year for the last five years. There are other reasons to think twice about LMT (sequester, earnings trajectory), but it is hard to argue with LMT’s winning combination of dividend growth factors. More commonly, you’ll see a stock with a high current yield will be growing its dividend more slowly (think AT&T, for example), or a stock with a lower current yield but that is growing more quickly (can’t think of an example off the top of my head).

Many of the most popular DG stocks, however, live somewhere in the middle, sporting current dividend yields in the 2 to 4 percent range and average annual dividend growth rates in the 5 to 15 percent range. These are your JNJs, MCDs, and PGs. These are often thought of as core DG holdings because of the great combination of good current yield plus (relatively) steady and predictable dividend growth.

I love these types of stocks, and they make up a large portion of my DG portfolio. But in weighing current dividend yield against the rate of dividend growth, I give a little extra weight to current yield. Over a long period of time, a low current yield that grows more quickly may provide much higher returns than a higher current yield that is growing more slowly. The difference to me (and reasonable minds may certainly differ about this) is that the higher current yield is a bird in the hand, while the faster dividend growth rate is two in the bush. You cannot predict so well how long a higher dividend growth rate will be sustainable. In the LMT example, if they do not get their earnings moving in the right direction again, there is little reason to hope that they will be able to continue to grow the dividend at such a fast rate for much longer.

Of course, both of these factors are important to consider, as together they make up the “dividend growth” part of “dividend growth investing.”

In the next few days, I’ll add another post in this series about the next entry criteria I consider: the payout ratio.
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#2
(03-24-2013, 12:21 PM)Kerim Wrote: It is a rare stock indeed that has a high current yield and that is also growing the dividend at a fast pace year over year. One example of this is Lockheed Martin (LMT). Currently yielding a generous 5 percent (approximately), LMT has also been growing the dividend at an average rate of over 20 percent each year for the last five years. There are other reasons to think twice about LMT (sequester, earnings trajectory), but it is hard to argue with LMT’s winning combination of dividend growth factors.

Wow. great posts! so do you think LMT is a buy?
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#3
(03-25-2013, 03:40 PM)bobbyboy1970 Wrote: so do you think LMT is a buy?

I'll post some thoughts about LMT over here, in the stock-specific discussion area.
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#4
(03-24-2013, 12:21 PM)Kerim Wrote: I give a little extra weight to current yield. Over a long period of time, a low current yield that grows more quickly may provide much higher returns than a higher current yield that is growing more slowly. The difference to me (and reasonable minds may certainly differ about this) is that the higher current yield is a bird in the hand, while the faster dividend growth rate is two in the bush. You cannot predict so well how long a higher dividend growth rate will be sustainable.

Both apply and it really depends upon your investing time frame. If you have many years of investing ahead of you than you should not overlook the lower yield stocks which provide higher growth. Those may well be your big winners in the end.

I agree that the medium yields with average growth should be a big part of your portfolio.

As I'm 71 I am no longer interested in low yielding stocks but do set a minimum yield I will consider and consider consistent growth a must. I also wait till stocks are value priced to get the best yield I can get.

In the long term your returns will depend not on which dividend stocks you buy but when you buy them.
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#5
My criteria is that the current yield must be equivalent to the corporate bond yield as adjusted for debt and inflation (see the stock valuation discussion). The dividend growth must be at least the inflation rate. I then make my selection of the best current price divided by future value, based on the average dividend over the next 5 years.
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#6
I don't have a minimum requirement for yield as I feel it takes away too many opportunities to invest in some good companies out there.

EOG, ROST, WSO, SBUX, PII, THO, ABC, CHD, CMI, IBM, CMI, UNP and QCOM are all companies that pay 2% or less that I own.
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#7
My minimum requirement for yield is 2.5%. I have gone under this, but I don't like to do it. I am looking at V. Normally too low of a yield for me, but the growth rate is outstanding.
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#8
Use the rule of 72 to see how long it will take to double your yield. If the company has good growth rate, then it when you buy the stock that counts.
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#9
(09-23-2013, 09:39 AM)cannew Wrote: Both apply and it really depends upon your investing time frame. If you have many years of investing ahead of you than you should not overlook the lower yield stocks which provide higher growth. Those may well be your big winners in the end.

Well said, cannew. Since I wrote the original post in this thread, I've done a lot more thinking about current yield versus dividend growth. Especially as a result of some good exchanges in other threads. I don't think I've reached any hard and fast conclusions, but I am certainly thinking that the dividend growth rate deserves more weight than I've been giving it. Especially since I've still got a long way to go until retirement.

I'm still skeptical of being able to predict future dividend growth rates with much accuracy, though.

In another thread I landed on the idea of "yield diversity," which is making more and more sense to me as I consider it. Most would agree that you need at very least twenty individual stocks to be diversified, and even better more like 30 to 50. With that many companies in your portfolio, it should not be too difficult to diversify across not only sectors, geography, and market cap, but also yield. So you'd have plenty of stocks with lower current yields but excellent dividend growth rate prospects, plenty of higher-yielders that are perhaps not growing the dividend so quickly, and plenty in between that have medium or average yields and dividend growth rates.

What do you think?
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#10
Oh my. There is a ton of info in this thread. My head is spinning from itall.
Look forward to learning more from you all and thanks a ton for the info.
Great site here.
Jim
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#11
There is no perfect investment method. Each person has to look his\her own situation, goals and time frame. Some may do well by having a core of DG stocks with some growth and even some speculative.

Do what you feel good about, have the time to manage and don't get caught up in the cycle of buying & selling.

For me I'm 100% DG. I consider dividend growth the key with above average yield. DG doesn't mean growth every year because even a good company may be forced to hold it div for a year or two before starting growth again. Patience is important and sometime hard to stick with the method chosen.
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#12
Have anyone from you tried Brazilian and Taiwanese dividend paying stocks? I was shocked to see the dividend yield these stocks were offering. Average dividend yield these stocks were offering was far ahead that I got within FTSE Stocks.Highest dividend Yield was from CEMIG with div yield of 30.28.
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