Summary Mobile Telesystems (NYSE: MBT) is the biggest stock holdings I had for over two years and it is also the first stock that I bought in my life My absolute gain for this stock is about 34.15% A review of the earnings and revenue growth of MBT indicated an...
Sustainability of Dividends
Guest Post: Investing Lessons [Advanced]
Sustainability of Dividends
Kelvin Seetoh, a full-time investor with a portfolio of listed businesses in the Asia-Pacific and USA region. His preference for businesses is founder-led, low working capital needs, large addressable market and competent management with integrity. He runs a blog at www.Kelvestor.com.
1 June 2018
Editor note: I would like to warmly welcome Kelvin for his first blog post at Re-ThinkWealth blog. He mostly invests in US and HK based stocks but of course, his technique would be applicable to most stocks in any stock market in the world. I like his writing style and our thinking and methodology are similar in many ways, so I am definitely looking forward to more blog posts from him.
With our banks interest rate and Singapore Government bonds yielding less than 3%, there are investors sought out for higher returns in listed businesses offering a higher yield. Using InvestmentMoats’ Dividend Screener tool, you will see a whole lot of companies offering reasonable amount of yield (4-9%). For example, Starhub (telco) has a yield of approx. 7-8%%, while VICOM (car inspection centre) has a yield of approx. 6%. For most retirees, they would love to park their assets into such dividend paying company to yield them a sustainable income stream to support their expenditures. It would be important to know whether the dividends are sustainable. Any retiree who projected their dividend yield to 6% do not want to wake up to a rude shock of a company cutting its dividends, thereby reducing the effective dividend yield to a much lower percentage. Even for my group of investors, most of them would not enjoy seeing a dividend cut or discontinuation of dividends.
A high dividend yield company may have seemed attractive, but we will explore the sustainability of it together. Here are some ways to determine sustainability:
- Consistency and pay-out ratio
- Availability of free cash flow
Consistency
I use this website called Dividends.sg as a quick gauge. Looking at Starhub’s dividends, it had been consistent from 2010 to 2016. However, in 2017, the quarterly dividends were cut from 5 cents to 4 cents – a 20% reduction. We will find out why later.
(screen grab from Dividends.sg on 26 May 2018)
Even for a seeming stable business such as Singpost, the dividends are not stable. You can see its quarterly dividends had been reduced over the years.
(screen grab from Dividends.sg on 26 May 2018)
So, what can we rely on?
First, we must understand that business conditions are dynamic. Occasionally, different cycles will cause earnings to fluctuate up or down and it affects the business’ ability to pay out dividends. As investor, we must never have the expectations for dividends to remain the same forever.
Second, create a buffer for your dividends expectations. If an investor needs 4% dividend yield for his lifestyle, then perhaps, it would be conservative to find companies with at least 6% dividend yield and a reasonable pay-out ratio (below 80%). In tough times, companies may cut their dividends, but you are still fine.
For simplicity, we will use the pay-out ratio to determine the sustainability of it. The pay-out ratio formula is dividends per share divided by earnings per share. We are trying to understand how much portion of the company’s earnings are used to pay dividends.
Using VICOM as an example:
| Year | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 |
| Dividends Per Share (cents) | 22.5 | 27 | 28.5 | 26.5 | 36 |
| Earnings Per Share (cents) | 32.17 | 34.04 | 35.45 | 31.77 | 29.90 |
| Pay-out Ratio | 69.9% | 79.4% | 80.4% | 83.4% | 120.4% |
You will notice the dividend declared for FY2017 was 120.4% of its earnings per share which may not be sustainable. A historical pay-out ratio of 80% seems more reasonable.
If I am seeking for 5% yield from VICOM, here is how I would compute it. Taking the FY2017 earnings per share of $0.299, multiply it by 80%, the estimated dividends per share is $0.2392. If the required yield is 5%, so we will take $0.2392 dividend by 0.05 or 5%, which gives us the share price of $4.78. But if I am seeking for 4% yield, I will take $0.2392 divide by 0.04 or 4%, which gives us a target share price of $5.98.
An extra note is as of FY2017, VICOM’s balance sheet has a cash per share of $1.21 which allows VICOM continue paying 3 to 4 years of dividends even when there are no revenues. This is a very strong sign of balance sheet strength and dividend paying abilities.
Using Starhub as another example:
| Year | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 |
| Dividends Per Share (cents) | 20 | 20 | 20 | 20 | 17 |
| Earnings Per Share (cents) | 22.0 | 21.4 | 21.4 | 19.7 | 14.1 |
| Pay-out Ratio | 90.9% | 93.5% | 93.5% | 101.5% | 120.6% |
Since 2013, You could see that Starhub is very close to paying 100% of its earnings out as dividends. It is increasingly being stretched to beyond 100% in both FY2016 and FY2017. In fact, you will see that Starhub has a net debt per share of $0.36 which is not a good sign for a dividend paying company.
Let us assume that $0.16 is the new norm for Starhub’s yearly dividend yield. Taking $0.16 dividend by $2.08 (26 May 2018 price), an investor would get a yield of 7.7%. It is way more than VICOM’s. However, we must be conservative where we question ourselves: is $0.16 dividends sustainable at all? Just imagine if it is being cut down further to $0.12 per year? The new yield would be 5.7% instead.
Let us look at the recent results of both companies:
For Starhub, the net profit after tax dropped by 13%. It will weaken the company’s ability to pay dividends.
For VICOM, nothing fanciful but the profit grew by 2.5%.
Given a choice, I would stick to VICOM business because the business is more stable and cash rich. I assure myself of the likelihood that the dividends are sustainable.
Availability of Free Cash Flow
The net profit after tax earnings are known as accounting earnings. Under a transaction where I sell 100kg of Apple to Wal-Mart, it is unlikely that I will receive cash-on-delivery as they would likely take some days to pay me. In my income statement, I could book in my accounting profits. However, under cash flow, there is no cash flow for the month. Therefore, we must focus on the cash flow. Likewise, we must know that dividends are paid out of free cash flow (FCF). FCF allows a company to (1) pay down debt (2) buy-back shares (3) reinvest in operations or (4) perform strategic M&A activities.
Free cash flow (FCF) is simply “cash flow from operations MINUS capex”
For FY2017 ended, Starhub generated S$ 517.2mil of cash flows. Deducting S$295.9mil of capex, S$221.3m of free cash flow is available. However, as we look lower, we realised that the dividends paid was 293.9mil. There was a shortfall of S$72.9mil. How did Starhub managed to pay the extra dividend? They took issued perpetual capital securities of S$199.6mil to meet the shortfall.
It tells me that the dividends are not sustainable because it is funded by debt. If a business borrows debt to pay dividends, it is not a good sign. The ideal scenario is where a business pays dividends out of organic cash flows.
Summary
When an investor chase for the yield without consideration about the sustainability of dividends, he/she might suffer from capital losses. Despite receiving the yield, the capital losses will cause net losses for the shareholder. While providing a good yield of 5-7%, Starhub’s share price corrected almost 25% since the start of 2018. Focus on sustainable pay-out ratio, stable businesses, and availability of free cash flow.
References:
VICOM’s EPS and DPS historical record: http://infopub.sgx.com/FileOpen/VICOM%20-%20Annual%20Report%202017.ashx?App=Announcement&FileID=494908
Starhub’s EPS historical record: http://ir.starhub.com/investors/?page=Financial-Highlights
Starhub’s FY2017 diluted EPS: http://infopub.sgx.com/FileOpen/StarHubLtdAnnualReport2017.ashx?App=Announcement&FileID=495895
Starhub’s dividend record: https://www.dividends.sg/view/CC3
Starhub 1Q results: http://infopub.sgx.com/FileOpen/PS1Q2018.ashx?App=Announcement&FileID=502951
VICOM 1Q results: http://infopub.sgx.com/FileOpen/VICOM_1Q2018.ashx?App=Announcement&FileID=504648
Disclaimer: The information provided is for general information purposes only and is not intended to be a personalized investment or financial advice.
Important: Please read our full disclaimer.
Thank you for your time reading.
Call to Action – value investing mentorship.
[Edited] Importance Of Knowing When To Sell Your Stocks Cannot Be Understated
"Knowing when to sell your stocks is as important-- or even more important-- than knowing when to buy them."- Chris Lee Susanto My Experience I have had experiences in buying stocks of good companies that quickly went to two years high price after I bought it earning...
[Edited] Apple Sued Qualcomm. Here Is Why I Bought It.
In February 2017 I initiated a position on Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM)-- a few days after it was sued by Apple-- when stock price plunged 12%-- for receiving unreasonable royalty fees via leveraging on their monopoly in the chip making industry. Apple sued Qualcomm and I...
My 10 Biggest Takeaways from Warren Buffett and Peter Lynch
Who is Warren Buffett? Born 1930, Omaha, Nebraska Started managing funds in 1956 with the formation of the Buffett Partnership (dissolved in 1969). Now chairman and major owner, Berkshire Hathaway Inc $1,000 invested with Buffett in 1956 would be worth $ 25,289,750 as...
How I Review My Stocks In A Simple Way- 28.11.2016
It is nearing the end of the year and I am doing a review of all my 4 stocks in a simple way, namely Mobile Telesystems (NYSE:MBT), Keryx Biopharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:KERX), Keppel DC REIT (SGX:AJBU) and Keppel Corporation (SGX:BN4). When I do my stock review, it has to...
Here’s What I Learnt From Trump Winning The US Election 2016…
This week, history was made. It was the first time that someone like Trump actually became the US president. And it's the 45th US president, I mean, the number 45 is also so easy to remember so it will definitely go down in history as the craziest thing that happened...
Investing Is The Same As Gambling, Or Is It?
A few days back, I was at a carnival at Singapore Management University (SMU) whereby they have games and foods lined up. After I played the games, I was given lucky draw slips. The lucky draw's prizes were quite attractive, there were three prizes-- iPod Nano 16 GB,...
3 Reasons Why You Should Only Invest In Something You Understand
1) You Tend To Be More Competent In Things You Understand There are things you know and there are things you think you know There are things we understand and there are things that somehow always seemed so Greek to us One thing for sure is that we can only be...
Here Are 4 Reasons Why Intel Stock Plunged 16% Last Friday
Last Friday on 24 July 2020, Intel closed 16.24% down. Although I do not own any Intel stock, I was curious why it fell after releasing its Q2 2020 results. Just a while ago, I saw the news that after 15 years of partnership, Apple decided to break up with Intel and stop using its […]
My 5 Key Takeaway From Temasek Portfolio Value in 2020
1. Temasek Portfolio is Huge. Although I know that Temasek has a huge portfolio, I was surprised to see that it is around the size of Warren Buffett’s. As of 31 March 2020, the net portfolio value or NPV is at S$306 billion. So we have our own Warren Buffett in Singapore, that is […]
What I Learnt From Adam Smith About Investment and Money
Who is Adam Smith? Adam Smith (1723-1790) was a philosopher and economist who was best known for authoring the book An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Wealth of Nations also happens to be one of Warren Buffett’s favourite books […]
A List of Value Investing Funds in Singapore and Outside of Singapore
As a value investor, as a practitioner of value investing, I am very interested in studying funds I view as an executioner of the various value investing methodologies I myself am very passionate about. In this article, I will list down some of the value investing funds in […]