Use Both the Dividend Cushion Ratio (Probability of a Dividend Cut) and the Qualitative Dividend Ratings in Your Assessment of the Payout

The Dividend Cushion ratio is one of the most powerful financial tools an income or dividend growth investor can use in conjunction with qualitative dividend analysis. The ratio is one-of-a-kind in that it is both free-cash-flow based and forward looking. Since its creation in 2012, the Dividend Cushion ratio has forewarned readers of approximately 50 dividend cuts. We estimate its efficacy at ~90%. By Brian Nelson, CFA Dividend investing has probably never been as popular as the past couple years. Remember, however, the dividend is capital appreciation that otherwise would have been achieved had the dividend not been paid. If you had a stock that was $10, and it paid a $1 dividend, you don’t have a $10 stock and … Read more

The Dividend Growth Newsletter Portfolio’s Outperformance

The Dividend Cushion ratio is one of the most powerful financial tools an income or dividend growth investor can use in conjunction with qualitative dividend analysis. The ratio is one-of-a-kind in that it is both free-cash-flow based and forward looking. Since its creation in 2012, the Dividend Cushion ratio has forewarned readers of approximately 50 dividend cuts. We estimate its efficacy at ~90%. Note: This article corrects the degree of outperformance of the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio, as of the date of the calculation (~3.6% –> ~9.4%). By Brian Nelson, CFA Excluding dividends, we estimate that the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio is down roughly 4.9% through the interim session October 30 from the beginning of 2022, beating the … Read more

Expect Huge Equity Returns This Decade, Much More Volatility However

Image: Without question, the stylistic area of large cap growth has been the place to be for almost 15 years now. We think it remains the place to be. Brian Nelson, CFA The game has changed folks. The flooding of the markets with liquidity during the Great Financial Crisis [GFC] and the bailout of the banks in 2007-2009 marked the beginning of a new “regime” that we now live in. It wasn’t until the collapse of the markets during COVID-19, however, that the belief these markets would continue to move ever higher was reinforced. Where is the risk? What does “Lehman” even mean anymore? “Lehman” was not risk – “Lehman” was a generational buying opportunity. What was the worst global … Read more

Call Me Unconcerned

Image: Large cap growth has dominated returns the past five years. The Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio continues to have significant exposure to this area. By Brian Nelson, CFA When it comes to the financial markets, the debt ceiling debate is nothing to worry about. Countries (sovereigns) cannot generally default on debt that is denominated in their own currency. The concern that there will be any sort of calamity if the U.S. government doesn’t raise the debt ceiling is far overblown, in our view. The political will of the U.S. to pay its debt will only resolve itself in time, and any risk premium built into Treasuries as a result of the debt ceiling showdown will be fleeting. Of course, nobody … Read more

Long Live Apple and Large Cap Growth!

Image: Since the release of the book Value Trap in December 2018, an ETF that tracks large cap growth (SCHG) has outperformed not only the S&P 500 (SPY), but also the areas of dividend growth (SDY) and small cap value (IWN) by sizable margins. By Brian Nelson, CFA We explained in part why we don’t like the dividends of banking firms in this note here, and we’re starting to see dividend cuts in the regional banking space, with PacWest Bancorp (PACW) as the latest banking entity to slash its quarterly payout. Right now, executives in the regional bank arena seem to be like deer caught in headlights, and we’re even seeing banking deals fall apart. The proposed deal between Toronto-Dominion … Read more

How the Payment of a Dividend Impacts Intrinsic Value Estimation

  “Dividends are a transfer of cash to the shareholders that the shareholders already owned.” By Brian Nelson, CFA Many investors use the strategy of dividend growth investing as a means to generate increasing income in their retirement portfolios to stay ahead of inflation, or as a means to grow an income stream in the decades before retirement. Though we think such a strategy has tremendous merit, we think it’s important for readers to understand the mechanics of how a cash dividend payment impacts the valuation (intrinsic worth) of a company. How the Payment of a Dividend Impacts Valuation (Intrinsic Worth) In this article, let’s walk through the valuation adjustments we perform when a company pays a dividend to hammer … Read more

We Woke Up on the Wrong Side of the Bed

By Brian Nelson, CFA Large Cap Growth Still Dominating Small Cap Value After the ‘value factor’ put up its worst performance in history during 2020, some retracement should have been expected in the subsequent 12-18 months, but large cap growth – our favorite stylistic area – continues to outperform. Since the publishing of the first edition of Value Trap: Theory of Universal Valuation in December 19, 2018, an ETF that tracks large cap growth (SCHG) has outperformed an ETF that tracks small cap value (IWN) by more than 45 percentage points. Using data that goes back to before the invention of the computer and television, researchers will tell you that there’s something called a small cap value premium. However, in … Read more

ICYMI: As Expected, Stock Pickers Trounce the Indexes When It Matters

Image: Charles Dickens. Image Source: Public Domain  “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.” — Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities By Brian Nelson, CFA It was the best of times with respect to relative “outperformance,” it was the worst of times with respect to absolute “performance.” During 2022, that is. If all that our readers were focused on last year were our missteps in Meta … Read more

Don’t Let “Them” Spin the Narrative

By Brian Nelson, CFA Let’s call it how it is: 2022 was an absolute nightmare for the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio. During the year, the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio was down 16.9%, according to data from the Vanguard Balanced Index Fund Shares (VBIAX). During 2022, the S&P 500 (SPY) index was down 18.2%, meaning that the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio, despite allocating to 40% bonds, captured over 90% of the downside risk. Modern portfolio theory is dead: Stocks have done far better than bonds during upswings, and only slightly worse during downturns. The risk/reward for the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio just doesn’t add up anymore. Bond prices did not move inversely to stock prices during the COVID-19 meltdown, and they did not move inversely … Read more

Get Excited: Dividend Growth Investors Rejoice! – More “Outperformance”

Image: Valuentum’s simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio continues to “outperform” relative to almost any dividend-paying benchmark this year! Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. This is not a real money portfolio. By Brian Nelson, CFA We just talked about the awesome success rates of the Exclusive publication, the fantastic performance of the simulated High Yield Dividend Newsletter portfolio, and now my friends, let’s put our hands together for Valuentum dividend growth investors! As of the last tally through October 19, the simulated Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio is beating the S&P 500 Dividend ETF SPDR (SDY) by roughly ~3.2 percentage points so far in 2022 (-8.4% versus -11.6%), all the while we’ve seen some awesome dividend growth by … Read more