The Game Is Nearing an End for MLPs…

The game is nearing an end for master limited partnerships (MLPs) in this energy cycle, in our view. We no longer feel comfortable, if we ever did, including any MLP in the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio. Linn Energy (LINE, LNCO), of the upstream variety, may have taken on far too much debt as an E&P entity, but its free-cash-flow management during the first half of 2015 has actually been decent…stronger than better-known upstream and midstream operators. Yet, despite Linn’s positive free-cash-flow execution, even after distribution payments, the entity’s bankers appear to be circling like sharks, ready to take a further bite out of its borrowing capacity (due to lower energy resource pricing). Fairly, the company simply can’t afford to take … Read more

LINN Energy and LinnCo to Suspend Dividend

The Dividend Cushion has foretold another cut! On July 30, along with second-quarter results, LINN Energy (LINE) announced it will recommend the suspension of payment of LINN Energy’s distribution and LinnCo’s dividend at the end of the third quarter of 2015 in order to save ~$450 million in cash from the annualized payouts. LINN Energy reported a net loss in both quarters thus far in 2015, and its yield was near 15%; simply unsustainable. We’ve been warning our readers about the risks associated with LINN Energy and LinnCo (LNCO) and their high-yielding payouts for over two years now, as we did again earlier this month. We rated the entity’s distribution safety as VERY POOR, based on its Dividend Cushion ratio … Read more

Dividend Cushion Ratio Predicts Two More Cuts

Forward-looking, cash-flow based dividend analysis has proven its worth once again. Chesapeake Energy (CHK) recently suspended its dividend, and Hi-Crush Partners (HCLP) has significantly cut its dividend. In each case, the Dividend Cushion ratio appropriately warned members. Early in July and prior to the elimination of its dividend, Chesapeake Energy ranked near the top of our list of dividend yields to avoid. Based on its Dividend Cushion ratio of -7.7, we rated its dividend safety as VERY POOR, and its dividend growth potential rating was also VERY POOR. The firm updated its financial strategy July 21 and eliminated its common stock dividend, effective in the third quarter of 2015. A reduction in investable capital due to the weak commodity price … Read more

Warning! 5 Heavily-Followed Dividend-Paying Stocks to Avoid

Zoetis (ZTS) The share price of Zoetis, the leader in the production and commercialization of animal health medicines and vaccines, is trading at a substantial premium to its standalone intrinsic value as a result of speculative optimism that a takeout of its shares might happen. Activist Bill Ackman’s near-10% stake in the 2013 spin-off of Pfizer (PFE) has investors believing a deal may be in the works, but there’s no real evidence of one. In fact, it appears investors are desperate to see something (anything?) happen: on June 25, for example, Zoetis leapt more than 10% immediately on unfounded rumors that Valeant Pharma (VRX) was putting together a bid. We don’t think a buyout of Zoetis is going to happen … Read more

Pain in Oil Not Likely To Subside Soon; Alibaba Disappoints

Just how bad are we drowning in crude oil? Yesterday’s inventory report showed the largest weekly supply increase in over 30 years, since 1982. That’s how bad. Yet, knowing that crude oil prices are driven by supply and demand, pundits continue to be optimistic, perhaps overly so, about the timing of the recovery in the price of the black liquid (USO). Let’s first start with OPEC, and the Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri, who said Tuesday that oil prices have bottomed as he “warned of a risk of a future price spike to $200 a barrel.” With inventories as they are and OPEC not ceding market share to US shale-based plays, we think the Secretary-General is drinking a bit too much Kool-aid. … Read more

Recent Illustration of Philosophy in Oil Equities

Those that apply the Valuentum framework are less likely to be involved in value or income traps because, among other variables, they demand material revenue and earnings growth for firms to earn a 10 on the Valuentum Buying Index. Value and income traps often occur as a result of secular declines in a firm’s products or services, resulting in deteriorating revenue and earnings trends (and a falling stock price). Value and income traps can also result from abrupt cyclical shocks that cause vast shifts in a company’s future free cash flows, or that which happened to firms such as Seadrill (SDRL) and Linn Energy (LINE). Users of the Valuentum approach are less likely to be exposed to these “falling knives” … Read more

Dividend Increases/Decreases for the Two Weeks Ending January 2

Below we provide a list of firms that raised/lowered their dividends during the two weeks ending January 2. The dividend reports of covered firms on this list will be updated shortly with the new information. To access our dividend reports use the ‘Symbol’ search box in our website header. Firms Raising Their Dividends This Week Alamo (ALG): now $0.08 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.07. Bank of the Ozarks (OZRK): now $0.13 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.125. FelCor (FCH): now $0.04 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.02. Investar Holding (ISTR): now $0.007 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.006. Teekay LNG (TGP): now $0.70 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.69. TerraForm (TERP): now $0.27 per share quarterly dividend, was $0.225. … Read more

Fantasy Yields Are For Fools

Brian Nelson, CFA We spend a lot of time talking about the safety of a firm’s dividend. In fact, we were the pioneers of the Dividend Cushion ratio, a comprehensive cash-flow based measure of the health of a firm’s dividend that takes into consideration all aspects of the company’s financial statements – not just the relationship between dividends per share and earnings per share, the payout ratio. As readers have come to learn, if a company’s Dividend Cushion ratio is below 0, there is significant risk to the sustainability of the payout. Most recently, the Dividend Cushion ratio highlighted the substantial risk related to Seadrill’s (SDRL) payout (in advance of the suspension), and the Cushion, as we call it here … Read more

Are the Oil & Gas Markets Doomed?

Q: Are the oil and gas markets doomed? Valuentum’s Brian Nelson: In short, no. For one, if we thought the oil and gas space (XLE) were doomed, we would not be holding onto Chevron (CVX), Kinder Morgan (KMI), and Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) in the Dividend Growth portfolio. Instead, I think what we are witnessing in the oil and gas market is a flight to quality and balance-sheet strength. Our outlook for oil and gas equities has not changed before or after the recent fall in energy prices. Valuentum’s thesis accepts the fact that crude oil (USO) and natural gas prices will be extremely volatile, and that’s why we’ve gravitated toward firms such as Chevron, which has the strongest balance … Read more

$45 Oil Prices!?!? There Is Never a Sense of Urgency When One Is Prepared

Image Source: Macrotrends The bull market in energy (XLE) has lasted for the better part of a decade. Ever since the turn of the new century, energy perma-bulls have made the case that “black gold” (USO) should continue its ever-upward price advance thanks to ongoing demand from emerging and developing economies coupled with reduced inventories and areas of supply. We’re seeing this thesis challenged right at this moment. In deciding not to cut crude oil output in the face of oversupply and falling prices, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), for the lack of a better phrase, is now essentially engaged in a price war with producers in the US that are using breakthrough technology to produce oil … Read more