Sunday, August 19, 2012

Introducing the Dividend Compass

When it comes to equity analysis, a lot of attention is paid to valuation -- and rightly so, as your investing career will likely be a short one if you consistently overpay for assets.

Surprisingly, however, there's typically little attention paid to dividend analysis, which usually begins and ends with a glance at the dividend payout ratio (or dividend cover). As long as the company is earning more than it's paying out, the thinking goes, all is well with the dividend; conversely, if the company is paying out about the same amount as (or more than) it's earning, the dividend is at risk.

There's more to it

While the payout ratio is important, in my experience, the main causes of a dividend cut are factors other than a high dividend payout ratio (or low dividend cover). Indeed, a high payout ratio is usually the result of past events and trends that have been in place for a number of years.

In fact, more times than not, the need to strengthen the balance sheet is the cited reason for a dividend cut -- creditors and ratings agencies get worried about a lack of cash flow and large dividends become an easy target for freeing up cash. In turn, a weak balance sheet is often the result of a deterioration in business strength over a number of years -- margins have contracted, growth has slowed, and free cash flow has dried up -- paired with over-borrowing or over-spending.

Early diagnosis is the key

So rather than just look at the dividend payout ratio, it seems prudent to take a more holistic approach to dividend analysis by considering other factors that contribute to dividend health, such as:
  • Sales growth: Sales are the life-blood of a company. If sales are drying up, that puts added pressure on profits and cash flows and thus the dividend, too.
  • Interest coverage (EBIT/interest expense): If a company is having trouble paying the interest on its debt, there's a greater chance that its creditors will get worried and raise the company's cost of borrowing, which could reduce net income. In a worst-case scenario, the dividend could be cut to accelerate the repayment of principal. 
  • Net debt/EBITDA: This is a common measure ((Debt-Cash)/EBITDA) that creditors and ratings agencies use to determine credit quality and it's commonly used as a metric in debt covenants. A firm that has borrowed too much or is struggling to pay down its debt relative to its profitability is more likely to have a risky dividend.
  • Dividend growth rate: A slowing dividend growth rate could be a sign that the company is less confident in its future growth potential. Eventually, all companies' dividend growth rates decline, but you want to see a steady decrease over many years and not a sharp drop.
  • Earnings cover: Even though I don't think it's the best measure of dividend health, earnings cover (Net Income/Dividends Paid) remains the most common metric cited by both companies and investors alike, so it should be considered in any dividend analysis.
  • Free cash flow cover: Free cash flow cover ((CFO-CapEx)/Dividends Paid) is a better measure of dividend health than earnings cover because companies don't pay out earnings -- they pay out cash. As such, I'd rather look at a company's cash flows than net income.
  • Operating margin: A company whose margins are contracting could be facing increased competitive pressures or becoming less efficient. When this occurs, less money falls to the bottom line and to cash flows and the dividend can become riskier. Cyclical companies' margins will naturally ebb and flow. In those cases, use rolling 5-year margins to account for the business cycle.
  • Return on equity: Companies that are unable to sustainably generate returns above their cost of equity are likely destroying shareholder value and usually have lower growth potential. Neither are good things from a dividend perspective.
Dividend Compass Tool 
 
With this framework in mind, I tried my hand at a new (and hopefully improved) spreadsheet model for rating the health of a company's dividend. I'm calling it the Dividend Compass, and you can access and download it for free by clicking here.

(It's hosted on Google Docs for sharing purposes, but you can download it to Excel by clicking on File>Download As>Excel on the top left hand corner of the Google Docs page. Once you've downloaded it, you can make changes. If something doesn't work, please let me know in the comments section below.)

To get started, all you need to do is enter a few years' worth of key financial datapoints (sales, debt, etc.) -- all publicly available data -- on the Inputs tab and then click on the Dividend Compass tab.


The Dividend Compass (DC) will rate the company's dividend health based on metrics derived from your entries, with a 5 being a perfect score and 1 being the lowest. The overall score is based on the weighted average scores of the eight metrics and the default weights are based on what I believe to be the most important metrics. You can change them to fit your approach as long as they sum to 100%.


The DC will also grade the dividend going back a few years and provide a 5-year average score that will help you identify trends in the dividend's health. A falling score in any of the categoreis, for instance, may indicate a trouble spot that's worth looking into.

A few things to remember

I can't stress enough that the DC should not be used as a buy/sell indicator nor is it meant to be the final word on any stock. It's simply a research tool to help you tell the difference between a healthy dividend from a risky one, using a more holistic approach than traditional methods. Further research is always necessary before making a trading decision. 

Dividend yield is not included as a graded metric in the DC. All else equal, I would expect higher yielding names to have lower scores and vice versa.

Finally, the DC is still in early days, so if you notice a bug or see room for improvement, please post a comment below. Questions and criticisms are always welcomed, too.

Hope you had a nice weekend.

Best,

Todd
@toddwenning on Twitter
(long JNJ, the default example in the DC spreadsheet)







Saturday, August 11, 2012

Do Banks Deserve a Place in a Dividend Portfolio?

Earlier this week, we learned that Standard Chartered bank (a stock that I own) was accused by the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) of engaging in illegal financial transactions with Iran. A worst-case scenario for the bank would be a loss of its New York banking license -- a possibly crippling action since so much money flows through the state of NY, and specifically New York City. The best-case scenario (save a complete dismissal of the allegations) would be a one-time fine and a temporarily tarnished reputation.

Pick your poison

From a dividend investor's perspective, the first case would be far worse as it could impair long-term profitability (indeed, StanChart keeps its accounts in USD) and increase the risk of a dividend cut or perhaps a rights issue. Assuming StanChart did, in fact, do something illegal a hefty a one-time fine should be relatively good news for dividend investors as the company's payout ratio is about 40%, so there's some margin of safety there to absorb a one-time shock. Plus, StanChart has excellent liquidity metrics and an industry-leading capital position. It would have to be a very severe punishment, in my opinion, to put the dividend at risk.

Just a few weeks ago StanChart increased its dividend by 10%, so if the firm knew about the DFS investigation it clearly felt comfortable raising the payout. If management didn't know about the DFS investigation then it either thought it was doing legitimate business in Iran or it was delusional enough to think they would get away with it. If management knowingly conspired or concealed transactions while at the same time heralding its reputation to investors in the recent conference call, that would be enough for me to consider selling my position.

However this plays out, this week's news has raised a number of questions and resurfaced concerns about bank stocks. If this can happen to Standard Chartered -- a self-proclaimed "boring" bank that successfully navigated its way through the financial crisis and had avoided all the scandals that plagued other banks (LIBOR, mis-selling products, etc.) in recent years -- what global bank couldn't this happen to? And more importantly: Do modern banks deserve a place in a dividend portfolio?

Times have changed

Dividend investors have been understandably apprehensive about bank stocks following the financial crisis, as the events clearly put into perspective the reality that modern banks are not the 3-6-3 banks that used to anchor many dividend portfolios. Today's global banks, by contrast, have opaque balance sheets and are more exposed to fat-tail risks (rogue traders, money laundering, etc.) that can quickly impair results.

As a result, today's banks are very difficult to value and you're thus putting a lot of faith in management's ability to make the right decisions. This is exactly why recent events at JP Morgan (the London Whale) and this week's story about Standard Chartered are so disappointing. Both banks have been held up as models for global banking post-financial crisis and the reputations of both firms have been questioned, leaving investors with fewer straws to grasp. If you don't trust the bank's management, it's hard to feel confident about the bank's future.

Worth the trouble?

So why bother with banks when there are plenty of good dividend-paying shares in "less risky" sectors?

I think it's completely understandable for a dividend investor to walk away from bank stocks given events in the last five years, but it's important to keep the following things in mind before making that decision:

1.) If most investors are walking away from bank stocks, that could be an opportunity for contrarian investors to make money in the long-run.

2.) By managing your own portfolio, you get to determine how much exposure you want to certain companies and sectors. If you're cautious about banks but think there's opportunity, make them a small percentage of your portfolio so they can't do permanent damage if things go south.

3.) Sufficiently capitalized banks with good liquidity should be better able to deal with periodic shocks to their business without cutting the dividend.

4.) After the carnage of the financial crisis, banks have a vested interest in building dividend momentum as a sign of improving health.

I should note that this was part of my thesis for Standard Chartered, so time will tell if it holds water.

Look before you leap

StanChart will remain a small part of my portfolio for now, but I don't anticipate adding any other bank stocks to my dividend portfolio in the near-future. Some stocks are just simply not worth the trouble, even if they're potentially undervalued, and I think most global bank stocks fit that bill today. There are plenty of alternative investments out there with more transparent balance sheets, higher dividends, and better cash flows and are easier to value, as well.

Whatever you feel about big bank stocks, be sure to approach them with eyes wide open. Times have changed and today's banks aren't the banks of old -- their dividends are riskier and you should demand a meaningful margin of safety given the heightened uncertainty.