Earnings and cashflow volatility put payouts at risk.
The market’s now digested the news of the Fed rate hike. Perhaps not so well. There’s still a lot of hiccups and burps heard in trading rooms. One thing’s certain, though: a quarter-point boost in the Fed Fund target rate ain’t making anybody rich. Not if they’re savers or retirees.
Such folk remain hungry for yields and ready users of income strategies, most especially high dividend stocks and funds. There are some pretty enticing dividend yields being dangled in front of investors now, free of interest rate and duration risk.
Dividends, of course, carry a different kind of risk. They aren’t guaranteed. Dividends can be cut or suspended at will, though companies are generally loathe to do so. Slashing dividends spooks investors, no matter what reason is given for the decrease. And nowadays, there are plenty of reasons to cut dividends. Deterioration in earnings and cashflows, in particular, figure large.
More than a few dividends, identified by the Reality Shares Advisors DIVCON screen as “very risky,” are in imminent danger of cuts or suspensions. These are mostly payouts from mortgage REITs, energy companies and financial institutions.
Some exchange-traded funds are loaded with shaky dividend payers. One in particular is the PowerShares Russell Midcap Pure Value Portfolio (NYSE Arca: PXMV) which owns nine of the 15 riskiest stocks. Together, these issues take up more than six percent of PXMV’s capitalization:
Leave A Comment