Reader Selections
Since May 2017, any dividend-paying stock mentioned in a message, e-mail or comment to the author is fair game for a reader favorite listing in this series of articles. Thus, it is possible that only rogues and discontinued, or dreadful, doubtful, dividend issues may appear.
Lately, readers and other contributors have questioned the intent, purpose, validity, and usefulness of my daily stock lists. Most, however, praise the effort to sort promising opportunities out of the thousands of dividend offers. After all, yield counts when searching for dividend winners.
Furthermore, my dog catching is, by method, a contrarian investing strategy and that can rub some investors the wrong way. It is most useful for new buyers; intended to guide readers to new purchases of dogs on the dips.
Most valuable to the writer, however, are those reader comments that truly catch errors in my calculations or changes in direction. Examples like the reader who missed my “safer” dividend follow-up articles because they contain dividend payout ratios.
There are also those who catch flagrant fouled stock lists not synchronized with the data charted. In January a reader discovered a “Safer” net gain chart posing as a Monthly Pay chart that even Seeking Alpha Editors missed.
Every month, some readers discover errant ticker symbols. In January a reader noted SSSS hadn’t paid a Q Dividend since April. And earlier this year, a reader asked how to identify Rogues in the ReFa/Ro list. The top ten are now so identified.
In June 2022, high yields were alleged, by one reader, to be sure signs of roguishness. Not true, high yields are sure signs of high yield, how long the elevated yield lasts, depends share price and corporate directors. High Beta is the most accurate measure of roguishness.
Reader suggestions of buy and hold dividend stocks are most welcome and sure to be reported on my ReFaRo posts. That’s my ultimate goal, of course, to find ten or twenty sure-fire long-term dividend payers purchased when their single share prices are lower than the dividend paid from
$1K invested. Suggestions, please! We’re trying to predict the future here, Kings and Aristocrats might hold up but may be too old and feeble to last.
In February, 2022 one reader suggested an options strategy for monthly-paying dividend stocks:
“You should identify where options are available on the Monthly dividend stocks. What I do is find mopay stocks with options, I buy and write covered calls about 6 – 12 months out. I look for a scenario where I collect the dividend and get my stock bought back at a much lower price than I pay, but pocket a premium that makes up the loss. This gives me a dividend boost, since my cost is lower. It’s like a guaranteed CD with little risk.”
Another reader suggested I dial-back my blatant opinion that high-yield equates to high-risk:
“The article says ‘high dividends are a sure sign of high risk.’
It should be ‘high dividends might be a sign of high risk.’
If a good stock/ETF/CEF with a 5% dividend drops simply because the whole market dropped, the dividend could get to 8 or 9%. I think that’s a great time to buy because the high dividend and low price makes it a low risk investment. “
More than one writer has decried my favoritism for low-priced stocks. They especially dislike my “ideal” stocks whose dividend returns from a $1k investment equaling or exceeding share price. A prime example is Sirius XM Holdings Inc (SIRI), the satellite radio and pandora music catalog owner, priced now at $3.84 easily passes my test (of dividends from $1k invested exceeding share price) with a forward dividend yield of 2.52%! A little over $1k investment now buys 260 shares. and they’ll throw the owner a return (from $1k invested) over 6.56 times the share price. Assuming all things remain equal, SIRI dividends alone will pay back their purchase price in 39 years and 8 months (and that assumes the satellite radio and subscription music service can survive that long)!
In August, 2022, a reader said a $15.40 dividend on a $1K investment was too small. I point out that holders of AAPL stock now garner a little over $5.00 in dividends from $1K invested.
In January, 2023 the following exchange occurred:
Sorry, but I’m confused. Why does it matter if a stock is $1000 per share and pays a $50 dividend, or $20 per share and pays a $1 dividend. Isn’t that the same 5% yield?
But if I’m following your logic, you would like the latter because the total dividend from $1,000 invested is more than the individual share price, but you wouldn’t like the former because it isn’t.
Am I missing something?
You’re right. Both the $1000 stock paying a $50 dividend and the $20 stock paying a $1.00 dividend cost $20 per dollar of dividend. Thus, neither is preferable because you’ve still spent $1000 to get $50 in dividends. The difference is entirely in the share count. One share versus 50. Which would you prefer to own?
The $1k invested exceeding single share price debate rages, meanwhile dividend investors crave an easy to locate starting point for their initial dividend investment.
The dogcatcher ideal balance point is a sweet spot to use for reference. A rule of thumb, so to speak.
Two months ago a reader made a prediction that PACW would be the next bank to collapse. Your heard it here first!
This month a pause in Fed interest rate hikes left PACW close to surrender but will it hang in when the hikes return?
Every month readers grumble that they can’t find my eight Dog of the week portfolios in my Dividend Dogcatcher service on the SA Marketplace (now called Investing Groups) site. This year SA has listed all the postings on my Dogcatcher investing group by date. So to find the summary and reference guide to each portfolio look at:
August 22, 2015 for I.
October 13, 2016 for II.
September 12, 2017 for III.
September 13, 2018 for IV (Ivy).
September 8, 2019 for V (Volio).
September 12, 2020 for VI (Vista).
October 10, 2021 for VII (Viital).
October 8, 2022 for VIII (Viking).
Incidentally, the VIII (Viking) portfolio of Dividend Dogs for each week launched on October 3 2022. The Viking SA Investing Groups ‘safer’ stock reports have been gathering since November 4, 2022.
Two new observations from April 2023:
“As much as I like SBLK I wouldn’t post the past dividend , and project it as a template for its future yield.
As always the first quarter is the lousy quarter for dry bulk earnings.
SBLK dividend policy is “”(Total Cash Balance – A Minimum Cash Balance) / Shares Outstanding””
You shouldn’t expect much- ramisle 20 Apr 2023″
“Mr. Arnold, I enjoy reading your many articles and get some great ideas from them. However I find the number of charts are a bit of overkill, many duplicating the info. I’m sure you have your set format and reasons why, but I’d be happy with only two charts; your sort by target gains and your sort by div yield. It would make it a much easier read. Thank You -pmbrandt 15 Apr 2023”
I’d gladly just submit those two charts and ditch all the verbiage. However, twelve years ago when I started submitting articles, the SA editorial team said they needed text to go with the graphics and topsy was born.
Foreword
Note that this month readers mentioned 26 stocks whose dividends from a $1K investment exceeded their single share prices. These are listed below by yield:
The ReFaRo May Ideal Dividend Dogs
Above are the 26 ideal candidates derived from the 38 tangible results from reader favorite & rogue equities received prior to May 31, 2023. YCharts data for this article was collected as of 6/14/23.
Actionable Conclusions (1-10): Brokers Estimated 25.7% To 49.89% Net Gains From 10 ReFa/Ro Stocks To June 2024
Two reader-favored top-yield stocks were verified as being among the top 10 gainers for the coming year based on analyst one-year target-prices. (They are tinted gray in the chart below). Thus, this yield-based forecast for reader-favorite stocks, as graded by Wall St. wizards, was deemed 20% accurate.
Estimated dividend returns from $1k invested in each of the highest yielding stocks, plus the median one-year analyst target prices, as reported by YCharts, created the 2023-24 data points which identified probable profit-generating trades. (Note: one-year target prices by lone analysts were not counted). Thus, ten probable profit-generating trades projected to June 14, 2024 were:
Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. – Petrobras (PBR) was projected to net $498.93, based on the median of target price estimates from 15 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 38% over the market as a whole. PBR is a rogue.
Chesapeake Energy Corp (CHK) was projected to net $438.75, based on the median of target price estimates from 19 analysts, plus the projected annual dividend, less broker fees. A Beta number want available for CHK. A rogue.
V.F. Corp (VFC) was projected to net $417.12, based on the median of target price estimates from 20 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 48% over the market as a whole. VFC is rogue.
BrightSpire Capital, Inc. (BRSP) was projected to net $399.08, based on the median of target estimates from 4 analysts, plus annual dividend, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 67% over the market as a whole. BRSP is very rogue.
Heritage Commerce Corp (OTCPK:HRBK) was projected to net $356.56 based on the median of target price estimates from 6 analysts, plus the projected annual dividend, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 6% under the market as a whole. A fave.
Devon Energy Corp (DVN) netted $344.61 based on the median of target price estimates from 26 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 134% over the market as a whole. It’s a true rogue.
Pioneer Natural Resources Co (PXD) was projected to net $343.38, based on the median of target price estimates from 28 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 43% over the market as a whole. It’s rogue.
Coterra Energy Inc (CTRA) was projected to net $329.69, based on the median of target price estimates from 25 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 74% under the market as a whole. It is a real fave.
Northrim BanCorp Inc (NRIM) was projected to net $261.89 based on the median of target price estimates from 2 analysts, plus the projected annual dividend, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 36% less than the market as a whole. A Fave.
Phillip Morris International Inc (PM) netted $257.04 based on the median of target price estimates from 18 analysts, plus dividends, less broker fees. The Beta number showed this estimate subject to risk/volatility 32% under the market as a whole. PM is a Fave.
Average net gain in dividend and price was estimated at 36.47% on $10k invested as $1k in each of these ten stocks. This gain estimate was subject to average risk/volatility 8% over the market as a whole. May, 2023, top-ten gainers counted six rogues, and four faves.
The Dividend Dogs Rule
The “dog” moniker was earned by stocks exhibiting three traits: (1) paying reliable, repeating dividends, (2) their prices fell to where (3) yield (dividend/price) grew higher than their peers. So, the highest yielding stocks in any collection have become affectionately known as “dogs.” More precisely, these are, in fact, best called, “underdogs.”
38 For the Money
Yield (dividend/price) results from YCharts.com verified by Yahoo Finance for ReFa/Ro stocks as of market closing prices 6/14/22 for 38 equities and funds revealed the actionable conclusions discussed below.
See any Dow 30 article for an explanation of the term “dogs” for stocks reported based on Michael B. O’Higgins book “Beating The Dow” (HarperCollins, 1991), now named Dogs of the Dow. O’Higgins’ system works to find bargains in any collection of dividend paying stocks. Utilizing analysts’ price upside estimates expanded the stock universe to include popular growth equities, as desired.
38 ReFa/Ro By Target Gains
Actionable Conclusions (11-20): ReFa/Ro Top (Rogue), PBR, Led 38 By Yield Through May
The 38 ReFa/Ro sorted by yield included 10 of 11 Morningstar sectors and two Uncollateralized Debt Instruments (ETNs).
The ten top reader-mentions by yield in May, were led by one energy sector member in the top ten, Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. – Petrobras (PBR) [1].
Then five financial services representatives in the top ten, placed second to fourth, seventh, and tenth, Virtus Stone Harbor Emerging Markets Total Income Fund (EDI) [2], Eagle Point Credit Co Inc (ECC) [3], FS KKR Capital Corp (FSK) [4], FS Credit Opportunities Corp (FSCO) [7], Banco Santander Mexico SA (BSMX) [10].
Finally, the remaining four places went to real estate sector members, Ares Commercial Real Estate Corp (ACRE) [5], Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT (EARN) [6], Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance Inc (ARI) [8], and BrightSpire Capital Inc [9], to complete the top 10 May ReFa/Ro by yield as of June 14, 2023.
Actionable Conclusions: (21-30) Top 10 ReFa/Ro By Price Upsides Showed 20.78% To 36.48% Increases To June, 2023.
To quantify top dog rankings, analysts’ median price-target estimates provided a “market sentiment” gauge of upside potential. Added to the simple high-yield metrics, analysts’ median price-target estimates became another tool to dig out bargains.
Analyst Targets Revealed A 5.68% Advantage For 5 Highest-Yield, Lowest-Priced Re/Fa/Ro Stocks To June, 2023
10 top ReFa/Ro were culled by yield for their monthly update. Yield (dividend/price) results verified by YCharts did the ranking.
As noted above, top 10 ReFa/Ro selected 6/14/23, showing the highest dividend yields in May represented three sectors: energy (1); financial services (5); real estate (4).
Actionable Conclusions: Analysts Predicted 5 Lowest-Priced Of Top 10 Highest-Yield Reader Favorites & Rogues To (31) Deliver 23.77% Vs. (32) 22.5% Net Gains by All 10 To June, 2024
$5k invested as $1k in each of the five lowest-priced stocks in the top 10 ReFa/Ro kennel by yield were predicted by analyst one-year targets to deliver 5.68% more net gain than $5k invested in all 10. The ninth lowest-priced ReFa/Ro top-yield equity, Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. – Petrobras, was projected to deliver the best net gain of 49.89%.
The five lowest-priced ReFa/Ro top-yield dogs for May as of June 14 were: FS Credit Opp Corp; Virtus Stone Harbor Emerging Markets Total Income Fund; Banco Santander Mexico SA; BrightSpire Capital Inc; Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT, with prices ranging from $4.65 to $7.17 per share.
Five higher-priced ReFa/Ro as of June 14 were: Ares Commercial Real Estate Corp; Eagle Point Credit Co Inc; Apollo Commercial Real Estate Inc; Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. – Petrobras; FS KKR Capital Corp whose prices ranged from $10.03 to $18.94.
The distinction between five low-priced dividend dogs and the general field of 10 reflected Michael B. O’Higgins’ “basic method” for beating the Dow. The scale of projected gains based on analysts’ targets added a unique element of “market sentiment” gauging upside potential.
It provided a here-and-now equivalent of waiting a year to find out what might happen in the market. Caution is advised, since analysts are historically only 15% to 85% accurate on the direction of change and just 0% to 15% accurate on the degree of change.
The 38 equities and funds discussed in this article were submitted within comments from Seeking Alpha members noted below.
Afterword
Here is the full pack of 38 March ReFa/Ro
(Listed alphabetically by ticker symbol, the pack includes the nicknames of recommending readers).
Note that this month readers mentioned twenty-six Dogcatcher Ideal stocks that offer annual dividends from a $1K investment exceeding their single share prices.
26 Dogcatcher Ideal Dogs from May
The net gain/loss estimates above did not factor in any foreign or domestic tax problems resulting from distributions. Consult your tax advisor regarding the source and consequences of “dividends” from any investment.
Stocks listed above were suggested only as possible reference points for your FoFa/Ro dog stock purchase or sale research process. These were not recommendations.
Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.
Read the full article here