Dividend Yields Soar
After yesterday's severe declines in the Financial sector, the indicated dividend yields on many of these companies have become laughable. Bank of America yielding 11.6%! Wachovia yielding 10.5%! Many of these dividends are going to have to be cut for these companies to stay solvent, but for ones that are able to continue with their regular payouts, share owners will be getting quite the yield.
Below we highlight stocks in the S&P 500 with the highest indicated dividend yields. If you're buying these names because the yield looks too good to be true, remember that it probably is.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Of October CDS Auctions and Helicopter Ben
- Big Troubles for the Euro
- Asset Securitization Crisis: The Butterfly Effect
- @VIC: Top Hedge Fund Picks
- Can Google Reach Its Pie in the Sky?
- Our Coming Depression
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- 36 Opportunities for the Beginning of the Bull »
- 25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's »
- 3 Stocks That Are Begging To Be Bought »
- iPhone Sales Drastically Surpass Q4 Consensus; Apple Reaches 10m Goal »
- Cramer: Dow Could Drop Another 14%, Oil's Going to $50 »
- Iceland: When Too Big to Fail Becomes Too Big to Rescue »
- Big Tech Prepares for Big Layoffs »
- Cash Position Best for Apple Investor »
- Why Is Everybody Selling as Buffett Is Loading Up? »
- Fannie and Freddie Did Not Cause This Crisis »
- GE Looks Very Attractive Here »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Another Analyst Likes Capstone
- Dell Looks Cheap
- @VIC: Jeffrey Schwartz of Metropolitan Capital Advisors- Taking What the Defense Gives You
- Fear, Panic & Opportunity in the Markets
- Borders: Interview with CEO George Jones
- Five Investment Principles To Remember Now
- Yesterday's Market: Advantage, Bulls
- Two Currency ETFs For the Resurgent Dollar, Yen
- Unintended Consequences - Fast Money Recap (10/6/08)
- Time To Go Long, For A Short Time?
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Michael Page International: Stock Down on Market Weakness
- Gaming Stocks Still a Poor Bet - Barron's
- After Coming Rate Cuts, Some Appealing Short ETFs
- M/I Homes: Common Share Price Perplexing
- Trading ERO This Week
- Talk Me Down From the Wells Fargo Ledge
- SKF Regaining Its Old Form?
- Continuing Haircut in DST's Investment Portfolio
- Fortis and Bradford and Bingley Banks Thrown Lifelines
- The Short Case on KBH Homes
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Time to Hoard Cash - Cramer's Mad Money (10/6/08)
- Buyers On Strike - Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/6/08)
- Still Bullish on RIMM - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/6/08)
- The Cramer Crash?
- Cramer: Dow Could Drop Another 14%, Oil's Going to $50
- Musical Chairs - Cramer's Mad Money (10/3/08)
- Not Much to Recommend - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/3/08)
- Imminent Rate Cut? - Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/3/08)
- American Express to the Sell Block - Cramer's Mad Money (10/2/08)
- Buy Rarely; Sell Repeatedly - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/2/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »





This article has 21 comments:
ng
The effective yield has almost doubled as the share price has dropped. But the underlying fundamentals are still strong. Deals are still being made and cash is still coming in.
Your research <sic> is poor
Yet, there are some nice dividends to be had elsewhere - look at the shippers, for instance, like GNK and SSW.
Disclosure - long GNK and SSW.
Tiedeman
I too am long SSW, as well as several other shippers. I have been concerned about the future of container ships, and am unimpressed with the performance for months. Holding because of the 8%.
I had heard that more US companies are doing less outsourcing. Could this be part of the container ships problem.
Sorry to post this here, but didn't know how else to contact Doc Mike.
In ACAS' Q1 results and FY08 dividend estimates released on 2/13/08, CEO Malkin Wilkis stated, “Our performance in 2007 was outstanding, particularly in light of the credit crisis,” said Malon Wilkus, Chairman, President and CEO. “We produced $4.65 of Realized Earnings per share which covered our dividend of $3.72 per share by 125%. The excess earnings, in part, allowed us to roll over $361 million of taxable income into 2008 to pay 2008 dividends. During the past ten years, I have answered investors' questions concerning how we would perform in a recession and credit crisis by stating that we would continue to perform well in a “steady state” mode. This year, we may have the opportunity to prove ourselves in such an environment. Our plan for the year includes a recession, no growth to our balance sheet and other steady state assumptions. Based on these assumptions, we forecast that we will increase our 2008 dividends 13% to $4.19 per share, and we forecast that we will roll over to 2009 more than $500 million of taxable income to pay 2009 dividends, a 39% increase in the amount rolled over into 2008 from 2007. Beyond this outstanding steady state performance, there are tremendous opportunities to make investments in dramatically under valued assets. If we were to raise additional attractively priced capital in 2008, we have the potential of investing in some of the best investment opportunities we’ve seen which could improve on these forecasts.”
(This PR can be read via the URL I included in "Website").
The 2008 dividend estimate included in this press release announced the Q1 dividend of $1.01 / share, with the balance of 2008 forecast as:
$1.03 for Q2 2008, 13% increase over Q2 2007;
$1.05 for Q3 2008, 14% increase over Q3 2007; and
$1.10 for Q4 2008, 10% increase over Q4 2007.
Next earnings announcement is 8/4 so don't miss the ex-div for $1.05 / share!
Since the 2007 taxable income rollover has already funded these dividends, even with the stated flat-line expectation through FY08, I cannot think of many other high-yield, low risk investments that float my boat.
A low tide does sink all boats, and the ~54% ACAS share value decline in the last eight months attests to the strength of the tar and feathers they were splattered with in the overall meltown of all things "Financial".
In ACAS' case, this collateral damage didn't hit any vital organs or blast any serious holes in the hull. Things look pretty buoyant to me, so I'm willing to bet she doesn't get stuck in the muck with the also-ran CDO / CLO subprime junkies when the tide comes back in.
At the current price, I think ACAS is a bargain.
Long ACAS
ng
Growth
Investor
I really hope ACAS could keep paying its rich dividend. But as the stock goes lower it seems to me that raising capital through share offers will be pretty expensive in the future..
1. Read this: online.barrons.com/art... - SSW'a ships are booked solid for the next seveal years, eves the ships that is has yet to take delivery on.
2. Go here and listen to June 16, 2008 webcast and watch the slide presentation: www.seaspancorp.com/in...
3. This really tells the story: www.seaspancorp.com/fl...
Look how many ships are chartered, for how long and that includes even ones that haven not yet been built!
pessimistic
optimist
pessimistic
optimist
good day