The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Clouds may be parting for dividend investors

-

U.S. companies are cutting their dividends less than investors anticipate­d, providing a potential boost to a stock market rally that has clashed with concerns over a recent surge in coronaviru­s infections.

S&P 500 companies are likely to see an aggregate two per cent decline in 2020 dividend payments, compared with analyst projection­s earlier this year of around 10 per cent, according to S&P Dow Jones.

That's good news for income-seeking investors at a time when a series of rapid interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve has taken U.S. Treasury yields to near zero, sending market participan­ts further afield in search of steady payouts.

"We saw a devastatin­g amount of dividend cuts, but the second half of the year does look a bit better," S&P Dow Jones analyst Howard Silverblat­t said.

U.S. financial markets are closed on Friday for the July 4 holiday. On Monday, data firm

IHS Markit reports its surveys of U.S. business activity, while Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. reports quarterly results on Thursday and U.S. initial jobless claims are also due out that day.

S&P 500 companies slashed or suspended over $40 billion in dividends in the second quarter, the deepest quarterly drop since 2009, according to S&P Dow Jones. The cuts tapered off in the latter part of the quarter as the U.S. economy began to rebound, fueled by Fed stimulus and easing lockdowns across the nation.

"The hope is that we have turned a corner, but that is going to depend on the reopening of the economy," Silverblat­t said.

The fall in Treasury yields to historic lows has raised the allure of stock dividends, which are generally paid four times a year.

The gap between the S&P 500 dividend yield and the 10year Treasury yield in March hit a high not seen since at least the 1970s, according to Datastream data, which does not go back further. Currently, the S&P 500's dividend is nearly two per cent, compared with the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury's 0.67 per cent yield.

Jake Dollarhide, chief executive of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma, has been buying shares of dividend-paying companies that have also been outperform­ing in the epidemic, including Johnson & Johnson, Campbell Soup, General Mills and retailers Costco Wholesale Corp. and Walmart.

Johnson & Johnson, which is among companies rushing to develop a coronaviru­s vaccine, raised its dividend in April. In June, Kroger and Target, which have been seeing more business with people staying at home, upped their dividends.

"I have plenty of older clients who only want dividend stocks," Dollarhide said.

"There are plenty of COVID-19 dividend plays," he added.

With California, Texas and many other states reporting record increases in new cases of COVID-19, the pandemic's trajectory remains the main source of uncertaint­y of whether more companies will suspend or cut their dividends.

More than 40 per cent of the United States has now reversed or placed reopenings on hold, analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a recent note.

Adding to uncertaint­y about future dividends, the Fed last week capped big-bank dividend payments and barred share repurchase­s until at least the fourth quarter after finding lenders faced significan­t capital losses when tested against an economic slump caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Wells Fargo shares have fallen about one per cent since late Monday after the bank warned it would reduce its dividend as a result of the Fed's annual bank stress tests.

Still, only three S&P 500 companies decreased or suspended their dividend payments in June, while six companies upped their dividends, according to S&P Dow Jones.

 ?? LUCAS JACKSON • REUTERS ?? A man wears a protective mask as he walks on Wall Street in New York City.
LUCAS JACKSON • REUTERS A man wears a protective mask as he walks on Wall Street in New York City.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada