Published on Jul 29, 2016
High
dividend yields may be attractive in the current environment, but
investors need to focus on future dividend growth, not current yield,
said Eric Ervin, CEO of Reality Shares. 'If earnings continue to slide,
the high yield, high payout ratio companies won't be able to maintain
their dividend and the stocks will become even more volatile,' said
Ervin. 'Take profits now on your high yielding, low quality names, they
have significantly outperformed the market. Transition those profits
into stronger healthier companies with good prospects for future
dividend growth.' The Reality Shares DIVS ETF , which seeks to deliver
capital appreciation based on the growth of dividends - not stock price -
of large cap companies, is up 3% year-to-date. Historically, dividend
and earnings growth have been fairly correlated over the long term.
However, over the last few years, dividend and earnings growth have
deviated significantly, and this makes sense as earnings growth is
traditionally much more volatile than dividend growth, according to
Ervin. S&P 500 dividend growth is around 2.5% year-to-date, while
year-over-year dividend growth is around 5.6%, according to Reality
Shares. 2016 should be the fifth consecutive year of record dividend
payments in the S&P 500, although it may not be the sixth
consecutive year of double-digit dividend growth. Ervin said the market
will continue to see strong dividend growth in the information
technology sector, regardless of whether or not earnings growth persists
among those companies. That is because they continue to have
lower-than-average dividend payout ratios and tend to have significant
amounts of cash on their books to cover increasing dividend payments for
years to come. The financial sector is another good place to seek
dividend growth, according to Ervin, now that the nation's biggest banks
have been passing the government's stress tests. 'You are not going to
get a massive yield out of these banks, but you are going to get
earnings growth and dividend growth out of that,' said Erwin, adding
that it is also a good time to reduce exposure to over-extended,
high-yielding utility stocks.
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