Just because a stock pays a dividend, it doesn't mean that its growth days are behind it. Apple (AAPL), which plans to pay its first dividend later this quarter, is still projected to grow earnings by 22% per year over the next five years. Apple plans to pay a quarterly dividend of about $2.65 per share. That equates to a dividend payout ratio of about 26% of earnings, based on forecasts of $10.33 in per share earnings for the next quarter and a low dividend yield of about 1.9%. The conventional wisdom is that the higher the payout ratio, the lower the future earnings growth.
Let’s say that a firm has £100 in capital and income of £10, for a return on capital of 10%. If it pays out 70% of earnings as a dividend, it would pay a £7 dividend and keep £3 as additional paid in capital. The next year, capital starts out at £103, and if we assume that the firm earns a 10% return on capital again, earnings would grow to £10.30 for 3% earnings growth. The more earnings the firm keeps, the greater the capital base and the faster earnings will grow. For example, if the payout ratio had been only 20%, the capital base would have grown to £108 and the 10% return on capital would result in earnings of £10.80, for 8% earnings growth. Of course, the higher the payout, the higher the current dividend yield is likely to be. Because utilities companies typically have steady capital needs with few growth opportunities, they tend to have high payout ratios and higher dividend yields, while tech firms have historically had low payout ratios as they often have many growth opportunities.
Now or Later?
So which is better: stocks that pay a modest dividend but offer the promise to grow that dividend in the future, or stocks that pay out most of their earnings as dividends with seemingly little potential for growth? There are pros and cons to both approaches. Dividend growth companies are often higher quality with disciplined managers focused on stable dividend growth. The ability to increase dividends through thick and thin suggests a management culture very concerned about protecting and growing dividends. This is a good signal for future growth, as it keeps managers focused on allocating capital wisely. Warren Buffet is widely known as a dividend growth investor. A counterargument is the fact that while growth sounds appealing, that growth is often priced into the value of the stock. Additionally, the current economic environment is characterised as having low growth, so reinvested dividends may not earn high rates of return.
Arguments in favour of a high payout are academic studies showing that higher payout ratios actually predict higher future earnings growth, both at the aggregate stock market level and at the individual company level. Perhaps what is more important than the payout ratio itself is the information signal from management. Managers who are confident in their business prospects and see strong cash flow in the future are more likely to pay out a large dividend.
Whether you prefer stocks with high payouts or stocks with growth potential, the fund structure is an excellent way to invest in dividend-paying stocks because of its potential for low-cost diversification. There are funds available that focus on higher-payout stocks as well as funds that focus on dividend growth. Dividend-themed funds have been a popular choice for fund investors over the past several years, as dividend yields look attractive relative to bond yields.
Within the European ETF landscape, perhaps the greatest example of the contrast in style between dividend growth and high current yield is the SPDR S&P UK Dividend Aristocrats ETF (UKDV), which consists of the 30 highest dividend-yielding UK companies with a track record of maintaining or growing dividends for at least 10 consecutive years, and the iShares FTSE UK Dividend Plus (IUKD), which offers exposure to the 50 highest yielding UK stocks regardless of their dividend history.
UKDV has a lower dividend yield (4.3%) than IUKD (5.7%) but stocks in the former have a price/earnings ratio of 12.7 times versus the latter’s 11.1 times ratio. Also, UKDV leans more towards growth, with 29% of its weighting in growth stocks, while IUKD has less than 9% of assets in growth stocks. From this, you can expect stocks in UKDV to grow faster in aggregate than stocks in IUKD, but they are also more expensive, selling at a higher valuation multiple.
Performance-wise, it’s difficult to say which one is better because the SPDR S&P UK Dividend Aristocrats was only launched in February. Over the last three months though, UKDV generated a loss of 0.7%, outperforming the -2.3% return of IUKD.
Hortense Bioy, Morningstar European ETF analyst, contributed to this article.