"No man can become rich without himself enriching others"
Andrew Carnegie



Thursday, May 16, 2013

Three Warning Signs of a Dangerous Dividend

English: A view from the Member's Gallery insi...
English: A view from the Member's Gallery inside the NYSE (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
By StreetAuthority

New York, May.16, stock advice .- One fund is paying a tempting 11% yield. Another offers 8%. Which one should you reach for?
To answer that, you need to ask the right question. The question is not "How high is the yield?" Instead, it's "How secure is the dividend?"
Dividend safety is far more important to total returns than yield size. My colleague, Elliott Gue,touched on this a few weeks ago.
Consider how chasing two of the S&P 500's highest yielders, which carried dangerously unsecure dividends not too long ago, would have impacted your returns.
Frontier Communications (NYSE: FTR) carried a yield over 18% before it chopped its quarterly dividend by 60% in February 2012 (from 25 cents a share to 10 cents). Its share price plummeted more than 26% over the three months following the reduction announcement.
Pitney Bowes (NYSE: PBI) boasted a 10% yield until it cut its quarterly dividend by half in April (from 38 cents a share to 19 cents). Its share price fell 15% in one day.
Put simply, dividend cuts that come from unsecure dividends can cause some uncomfortable -- and often unnecessary -- investor losses.
The good news is that it is fairly easy to protect yourself from these losses and assess how secure dividend payouts are -- especially for income-focused funds. Here are the three warning signs to watch:
1. Return of capital
2. Over-distributed net investment income
3. Payout ratio
Return of capital: When a fund makes regular payments consisting of "return of capital," it can be a signal of a dangerous dividend. Often, these payments are simply returns of investor's capital or shareholders' equity.
Funds supplement their distributions with returns of capital when investment income or gains aren't enough to maintain the dividend. In effect, the fund dips into its capital pool to maintain the dividend.
Over-distributed net investment income: Closed-end funds are required to distribute at least 90% of their taxable income each year to avoid paying corporate taxes on what's distributed.
They also must pass along at least 98% of their income and net capital gains each year to avoid paying a 4% excise tax on what's distributed.
However, some managers elect not to distribute all income earned during the year and instead pay the 4% excise tax on this income. What's lost to taxes is gained in asset value, and the undistributed net investment income (UNII) can be used to supplement future distributions as needed.
So UNII secures the dividend and bodes well for dividend increases.
In contrast, over-distributed net investment income -- when a fund distributes more than it made in a year -- may be a sign of dividend danger. The statement of assets and liabilities tells you whether the fund has undistributed or over-distributed income.
Payout ratio: Closed-end fund distributions typically can come from three sources: return of capital, capital gains and investment income. Of these, investment income from dividends and interest on portfolio holdings is generally the most predictable as payments are issued at regular intervals.
The payout ratio provides a handy measure of how much of the fund's distribution comes from investment income, net of expenses. The ratio provides a quick gauge of how secure the yield is by the fund's current portfolio holdings. So if a fund earns a dollar a share in net investment income and pays out 90 cents, then you can quickly see the fund can cover its payments without dipping into its capital.
Action to Take --> One thing to keep in mind: I'm not saying you shouldn't look for investments with higher yields. But when it comes to making a winning income investment, steady and secure dividends should be your top goal. If you keep these three items on your checklist when looking for a solid income investment, you should be on the right track. ...
Enhanced by Zemanta

No comments:

Post a Comment