Where Dividend Investors are Seeking Income

Somewhere along the yield curve, with rates lingering barely above zero, the dividend calculus got more complicated.

Utilities and REITs are no longer the easy favorites as investors starved for income bid up prices. In their place, dividend investors are turning to sectors such as health care, technology and financial services where the earnings prospects seem strong and the Fed seems distant. The new equation combines the search for competitive dividend yield with an emphasis on superior dividend growth.

Dividend investing attempts to capture returns from profits (as paid throughdividends) as well as stock price appreciation (as share prices rise). The chart below illustrates how the return (the aggregate result of dividend and stock-price appreciation) was twice as great among stocks of companies initiating or growing dividends as it was among companies paying none. Even compared with the market broadly, returns for companies initiating or growing dividends were nearly one third higher.

Returns of the 500 Largest US Stocks by Divendend Policy

For illustrative purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

In today’s market, some of the most interesting dividend opportunities are among technology, health care and financial firms where expectations are for earnings and dividends to rise. Unlike certain “bond market proxies” – companies like consumer staples, utilities and REITs – they may be less affected by the gradual rate hikes the Fed seems to have in mind.

Technology

Many people don’t know it, but tech companies account for nearly 15% of total dividend payouts for the S&P 500 Index. That’s the single largest sector contribution among the 10 broad sectors; and it’s triple what tech stocks delivered a decade ago, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. For investors focused on dividends in tech companies, one cue could be cash. Cash represents as much as 25% of the valuation of some tech stocks. For investors, that cash might indicate significant potential for growth in dividend and growth in general.

Health Care

In health care, ongoing consolidation is putting more market share in the hands of a few strong players. The stocks to look for are the quality companies providing value-added services in an expanding segment of the economy. They are the ones with strong potential for growth in earnings and thus dividends.

Financial

The financial sector is another area where dividend prospects have been improving as the turmoil of the 2007-2008 crisis recedes. After years of adjusting balance sheets to improve capital ratios, many financial firms are, in fact, becoming safer than ever. Yet market perceptions continue to lag. That means there are a number of possibilities in the financial world among companies raising or restoring dividends to find potential opportunities for dividend yield along with stock-price appreciation.

One more thing to think about. Investing in companies inclined to increase their dividends can afford a sort of resiliency that investing for growth alone may not. The reason is simple: dividend income can provide investors with a return even through down markets.

It’s fashionable in the market to focus on growth. Yet so many of the new economy luminaries don’t pay a dividend – not yet anyway. No matter. Whether it’s caring for people or helping them communicate, there’s nothing old-fashioned about total returns that top the market. Focus on quality businesses capable of sustaining and growing earnings – and dividends.


This material represents an assessment of the market environment as of the date indicated and is not intended to be a forecast of future events or a guarantee of future results. This information should not be relied upon by the reader as research or investment advice regarding any issuer or security in particular.

The strategies discussed are strictly for illustrative and educational purposes and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase or sell, or an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. There is no guarantee that any strategies discussed will be effective. Dividends are not guaranteed.

©2015 BlackRock, Inc. All rights reserved. iSHARES and BLACKROCK are registered trademarks of BlackRock, Inc., or its subsidiaries. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.

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