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Dividends Are Dumb

http://www.fool.com/investing/dividends-income/2010/02/26/dividends-are-dumb.aspx

Question everything.

It’s a good motto if you ever find yourself in a government-conspiracy movie. And it’ll also serve you well any time money’s involved.

The folks who question seemingly self-evident principles can make an absolute killing.

  • Ask the Super Bowl bettors who took the so-called suckers’ bet of the Giants over an 18-0 Patriots team.
  • Ask hedge fund manager John Paulson, who made more than $10 million a day in 2007 ($3.7 billion total) because he figured out housing prices could actually fall.
  • Or ask some guy named Craig who questioned the virtual monopoly that newspapers had on classifieds (yes, that’s a craigslist reference).

So when I heard the argument recently that dividends are actually a bad thing, I was willing to listen.

In fact, it’s a more compelling argument than you may think.

These dividends are just dumb
Why do we invest money in a company? Ultimately, it’s because we think that company can grow our money by using that money to invest in its growth.

When a company turns around and gives us that money right back (creating a taxable event in the process), it defeats the purpose. If we want out, we can simply sell our shares. And do so on our own timetables.

Hence, anti-dividend people maintain that even the modest dividends that companies likeHalliburton (NYSE: HAL), General Electric (NYSE: GE), and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT)pay out are just plain dumb.

But hear them out. The case against dividends gets stronger given the reason folks buy dividend stocks in the first place.

Frequently, investors who buy shares of companies that pay large dividends are seeking safety and stability. Why? Because a company that commits to a regular dividend payment is signaling exactly that — safety and stability.

So it’s ironic that a dividend can act like debt — an obligation that makes the bad times worse. Although paying dividends is optional (while missing debt payments leads to bankruptcy), a company that chooses to cut its dividend signals weakness, often leading to a further weakening of its stock price. That’s a double whammy no investor wants to face.

Yet I still heart dividends
So why am I still bullish on dividend payers?

I’ll leave aside the empirical evidence that dividend payers have handily outperformed non-payers historically. Instead, let’s look at a company’s life cycle.

Early in a company’s history, it feeds on cash like a baby sucks down formula. Investors don’t care, though, because the company needs that capital to fuel its growth. Soon enough, that company either fails or becomes bigger and stronger.

At some point, it starts producing more cash than it’s consuming. It can then build a war chest to ensure its survival through good times and bad.

But then what? If there aren’t any compelling internal opportunities, a company has four choices:

  • Sit on the cash.
  • Buy back shares.
  • Make acquisitions.
  • Pay dividends.

When you look at all four options carefully, dividends make a heck of a lot of sense.

Dividends stand alone
Sitting on cash is safe, but it’s a drag on a company’s return on capital — especially when interest rates are hugging 0%. Apple‘s (Nasdaq: AAPL) chosen this path, hoarding more than $20 billion. But few companies have the amazing innovation-driven growth that can hide this drag.

Buying back shares is almost like a dividend with no tax consequences. In fact, if a company can buy back its stock at low points, it can really juice returns to current shareholders. Unfortunately, most managements don’t do a good job of timing. Even Goldman Sachs(NYSE: GS), the reputed master of the markets, made massive repurchases of its stock throughout the heady bubble years only to have to sell new stock to raise cash when its stock price was hammered. Classic “buy high, sell low” behavior.

Acquisitions are the scariest of all. You see, management is often judged on its ability to grow the business, specifically earnings per share. That’s why they’ll buy back shares at inopportune times. And that’s why they’ll pursue ill-advised acquisitions and poorly conceived internal projects with such gusto. This growth at an unreasonable price helps management but hurts shareholders.

Which leads to the reason I love dividends. The issuance of a regular dividend instills management discipline by removing some capital from consideration. You can’t waste what you can’t touch.

Meanwhile, as shareholders, we get a nice income stream … the classic stock play that yields like a bond.

With 10-year Treasury bonds currently yielding just 3.6%, dividend stocks are that much more attractive. Because of this, let me share three dividend plays that the dividend hounds at ourMotley Fool Income Investor newsletter have identified and recommended.

Company Description Dividend Yield
Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX) America’s largest payroll processor for small and medium-sized businesses 4.1%
Clorox (NYSE: CLX) Maker of Clorox bleach, Glad trash bags, Kingsford charcoal, and Pine-Sol 3.3%
Philippine Long Distance Telephone The Philippines’ leading fixed and mobile telecom provider 4.9%

How Did You Miss This Stock?

http://www.fool.com/investing/dividends-income/2009/11/05/how-did-you-miss-this-stock.aspx

If you’re a nerd like I am, then you’ve read your Jeremy Siegel research and can name the top-performing S&P 500 stock from 1957 to 2003. But if you don’t know the name of that stock, see if you can guess it from the five hints below.

  1. It was a “sin stock.”
  2. Thanks to perceived risks surrounding its core product, the stock was perpetually undervalued.
  3. The company benefited from having a brand that remains one of the most-recognized in the world.
  4. The company generated significant recurring cash flows.
  5. It paid a dividend.

Can you guess?
It turns out that this super-stock delivered a near-20% annual return from 1957 to 2003, performance that would have turned a measly $1,000 into more than $4 million.

And the secret to getting this return, Siegel discovered, was a combination of hint No. 2 and hint No. 5. By taking the company’s hefty dividend and reinvesting it in its perpetually undervalued shares, investors ended up really juicing their returns.

So what was the stock? You probably guessed that it was cigarette-maker Altria (NYSE: MO)– a stock that’s still paying a greater-than-7% yield.

Yet even if you don’t wish to own Altria — given what it sells, some don’t — the lessons its stock teaches are relevant for everyone who seeks to make good money in the market.

Look for:

  1. Undervalued stocks with …
  2. Strong brands that …
  3. Generate recurring cash flows and …
  4. Pay a rising dividend to shareholders.

A lineup of promising suspects
Our research team at Motley Fool Income Investor specializes in finding these types of stocks for their investors. While I can’t give away their current picks, here are six stocks they told me I could tell you they’re watching:

Stock Current Yield 5-Year Dividend Growth Rate
Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) 2.2% 25.5%
McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) 3.7% 29.5%
Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) 3.7% 21%
Leggett & Platt (NYSE: LEG) 5.4% 12.1%
Telefonica (NYSE: TEF) 7.3% 21.3%
Verizon (NYSE: VZ) 6.5% 3.8%

Data from Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor’s.

They may not look exciting — which may be why people miss them. But they share some key traits that make them excellent candidates.

First, because they’re in industries like consumer staples and telcom, these companies generate sustainable cash flows. Second, as you can see in the table, these companies have demonstrated a commitment to rewarding shareholders by growing their dividends over time. And third, they all boast healthy yields that exceed the market average.

Put those payouts together with the chance that these stocks will rise over time, and you have a nicely defensive investment opportunity.

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    2012-05-18 02:46
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