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April 2024



Equity Income:
Dividend Growth and Income




Tony Hu Director

Key points:

  • Over the last 10 years, attractive yielding dividend stocks have yielded an average of 4%, and grown dividend income +7% per year.
  • Dividend income growth is a potential inflation offset and compounder of value.
  • Attractive yielding dividend stocks provide both growing income and potential capital appreciation.

A key characteristic of our attractive dividend universe is its historically consistent, relatively high yield, which can be a meaningful contributor to overall client portfolio income while providing potential equity upside. We expect its income to grow over time, with the potential to offset inflation and compound portfolio value.

Let’s take a look at the dividend universe vs. a couple of alternatives.

Over the last 10 years, our dividend universe has averaged a yield of 4%, more than twice as high as the average equity market yield1 and approximately 50 bps higher than the average yield of corporate bonds2. During that time, our benchmark’s dividend has increased at a 7% CAGR, slightly ahead of that of the S&P 500 and ahead of inflation (<3%). Fixed income is fixed.


The accompanying chart plots the hypothetical experience looking forward 10 years for these three asset classes using current yields and historical growth rates (the range around each solid line accounts for variance of +/-2% vs. the historical average) and assuming an initial investment in each of $1m. Within three years, dividend growth raises portfolio income of the attractive dividend universe above that of corporate bonds, even at today’s compelling rates, and continues to grow from there. Income from the market portfolio never catches up.

Chart 1: Dividend Growth and Income

Source: Bloomberg, as of March 2024.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Indices are unmanaged, and one cannot invest directly in an index. Index returns do not reflect a deduction for fees or expenses.

DVY: The iShares Select Dividend ETF seeks to track the investment results of an index composed of relatively high dividend paying U.S. equities. The ETF has a fee of .038%.

 

SPY: The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust aims to track the Standard & Poor’s (S&P) 500 Index, which comprises 500 large-cap U.S. stocks. The ETF has a fee of .09%.

 

Moreover, while yield to cost in this example ends up at an approximate 9% yield, history shows that the dividend portfolio is unlikely to trade there. Rather, history suggests it is more likely that the portfolio continues to be priced around that 4% yield.  In order for that to be the case, for the yield to remain around that historical average, with income having roughly doubled, portfolio value would have to roughly double as well.

The appropriate mix of income, potential equity appreciation, and volatility is part of the mosaic that our portfolio managers build for clients. That mix can and should be adjusted, as appropriate, over time, based on evolving market conditions and client needs.  That our dividend universe provides consistently meaningful and historically growing income gives it an ongoing place in the conversation, in our view.

Within the equity income strategy, given today’s normalizing rates and inflation, we have biased stock selection in favor of dividend growth over yield, all else equal, to maximize its potential benefit as an inflation offset.  

1 S&P 500 Index

2 Bloomberg U.S. High Yield Corporate Index




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