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Are High Dividend Stocks Worth Investing

Dividend Investing, Strategies, Value Investing

Written by:

Alvin Chow

Mebane Faber recently wrote a controversial piece on dividend investing.

Mebane said that there were many studies to show dividend paying stocks beat non-dividend paying stocks, or the broad market as a whole.

Looks impressive right?

Yeah! Dividend stocks for the win!

The Real Reason Why Dividend Stocks Beat The Market

But little did people realise the dividend stocks that beat the broad market were because they were also VALUE stocks.

To help you understand the differences I have drawn a Venn diagram for you:

In a nutshell (I am generalising here to simplify the explanation),

  • Section A = Value Stocks = They tend to outperform the market as a whole
  • Section B = Dividend Stocks = They tend to under-perform the market as a whole
  • Section C = Value Stocks that pay Dividends = They tend to outperform the market as a whole

It is important to note that we are comparing Total Returns (capital gains + dividend gains).

Also, the reason I am using ‘as a whole’ is because there are failed examples in all sections if you dig hard enough. There are both value and dividend traps but if you hold a diversified portfolio in each section, the above outcomes hold true generally.

Bottomline, it is the value factor that determines if your portfolio of stocks outperforms, NOT whether the stock pays dividends.

And value factors usually consist of low Price Multiples such as low P/E, P/B, P/S, P/FCF ratios. In the past, high dividend yield suggests under-valuation, but this assumption does not hold anymore due to the tax implications.

Potential Pitfalls of High Dividend Stocks

Mebane also added that high yielding stocks tend to be junk-like, with unsustainable payouts and high leverage.

These stocks lure investors with the current high yields and subsequently reduce or stop dividend payments when they run into business problems. Stock prices would dive following the bad news and investors would incur large capital loss, often larger than the amount of dividends received.

The Unfortunate Case of A High Dividend Stock: Rickmers Maritime

One good recent example would be Rickmers Maritime, which at one point in time was giving out 15% dividend yield as reported by one investor.

It depends how you would define value for this stock because it can be subjective. If you look at NAV, it would be undervalued. But to me, the CNAV would have discounted many of its ships and not qualify the stock as undervalued.

Other investors who look at FCF and payout ratios would see a red flag early too. Basically, the stock offers high dividend yield but without value.

That said, it doesn’t mean you want to avoid dividends altogether. It still feels good seeing the money going into your bank account every year. The important lesson is that looking at dividend paying stocks is not good enough as a standalone criteria. You need a value factor.

You would want to find stocks in the Section C.

The next question is how?

3 Steps to Find Dividend Stocks Trading At Undervalued Prices

1) Shortlist Dividend Payers and Growers

First, we shortlist stocks who are consistent dividend payers and growers. This means that we first qualify stocks that have the ability and the propensity to distribute dividends over long periods of time.

2) Rank and Group Shortlisted Stocks

Second, we rank these stocks based on a value factor and group them into deciles.

An investor should only look for stocks within the cheapest decile. This is to increase the probability of making a profit from the stock.

3) Detailed Analysis

Third, we would look deeper into each stock and analyse the following:

  • Dividend growth rate
  • Payout ratio
  • Free-cash-flow
  • Dividend yield-on-cost
  • Dividend yield range
  • And even dividend tax considerations

Qualitative analysis would be added to catch important information that could be missed out from the numbers.

Conclusion

Essentially, we are picking dividend stocks which are value stocks with this method.

We could narrow the universe of stocks into a few hundreds globally, and rank them based on ‘cheapness’.

An investor would be able to achieve market beating total returns while collecting regular dividends, enjoying best of both worlds.

If you are looking for a way to build a dividend income, join Chris as he shares how he managed to retire at 39 and live off his dividend pay checks.

5 thoughts on “Are High Dividend Stocks Worth Investing”

  1. It’s such common sense, but I’ve never thought about looking at it from the value perspective and just using dividend payments as a way to narrow down my choices. Thanks for this insightful post.

    Reply
  2. Value stocks could go up and down, depending on market condition, demand and supply for the stock. Dividend stock provide stable passive income to many, especially retirees. What is said in the article also hold true. Please provide a list of Singapore listed dividend stocks based on the 3 steps mentioned in this article.

    Reply

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