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Inside the
Numbers: Small Caps, Big Yields
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Published: May 5, 2010
If you're anything
like the average
dividend investor, you
want one thing: safe,
reliable income. Sure, a
large payout is nice,
but at what cost? A high
yield means nothing if
it's here today, gone
tomorrow.
Maybe that's why
investors shy away from
stocks with a small
market capitalization
when looking for income.
It's easy to think that,
because a company is
relatively diminutive,
the payout isn't stable
or the yield is small.
In some cases, that's
true. In others, that's
a mistake. And investors
could pay dearly by
losing out on an entire
group of well-paying,
and sometimes
fast-growing, stocks.
All it takes to get in
on the action is a
little homework.
The first thing we want
to look for is obvious:
small-cap stocks that
pay dividends.
Technically, these are
stocks with a market cap
under $2 billion. For
our screening purposes,
we'll also put a floor
in at $100 million.
Anything under that, and
we're getting into
micro-cap territory,
which carries more risk
than most dividend
investors are willing to
stomach. We also want to
make the search for high
yields worth our while,
so we'll look for yields
above 6.5%.
But we can't just stop
there. It's absolutely
vital that a high yield
is justified -- that is,
supported by sustainable
cash flow and not on the
verge of being cut at
the slightest downturn
in business. One simple
metric
payout ratio.
Say a company earned
$500 million in a year
and paid out $250
million in dividends. A
little simple math
(250/500 = 0.5) tells us
that makes for a payout
ratio of 50%, meaning
the company paid half of
its earnings as
dividends. A good payout
ratio depends on the
industry, but anything
above 100% means a
company is paying out
more than it earns. This
should set off warning
bells, because it means
the company uses cash
reserves to meet its
current dividend
obligations. That can't
last long if business
doesn't pick up, and the
company will either
continue bleeding cash
or it will have to cut
the dividend payment.
Neither is particularly
desirable.
With these factors in
mind, the
StreetAuthority research
staff came up with the
following screen:
- U.S. stocks with market caps between $100 million and $2
billion
-
Dividend yield above 6.5%
- Posted positive earnings last quarter and on a trailing
twelve month basis
- Dividend payout ratio under 65%
Here's what we found:
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There are two
standouts in this table
and one obvious red
flag.
Internet service
provider Earthlink's
(Nasdaq: ELINK) best
days are behind it. Its
customer base does churn
out enough cash to
support its 6.5% yield
with room to spare, but
macro factors are set to
crush this small
company. The company
focuses on retaining
existing dialup
customers who have not
switched to broadband
Internet access because
of either price or
availability. But as the
old adage goes, "If
you're not growing,
you're dying." Internet
service is getting
cheaper, faster and it's
expanding into more
parts of the world as we
speak. Customers are
growing to expect more
bandwidth and
competitors like AT&T
(NYSE: T) and
Verizon (NYSE: VZ)
will be all too happy to
expand into the areas
Earthlink services and
seal this company's
fate.
The two standouts from
this list are Buckle
(NYSE: BKE) and
International
Shipholding (NYSE: ISH).
Buckle is a clothing
retailer that sells
simple, fashionable
styles to the younger
crowd, not the
high-fashion type of
retailer that might get
left out if it misses
the mark on evolving
trends. When other
retailers felt the hit
of lower consumer
spending during the
downturn, Buckle turned
in solid results in
fiscal 2009, growing
revenue and profits. The
company has focused on
steady growth over the
years and pays out less
than a quarter of its
earnings, yet still
yields 8.5%. (Note: The
bulk of Buckle's payout
is in the form of a
"special" dividend based
on earnings).
Mobile, Alabama-based
International
Shipholding is a
maritime transporter
with a fleet of 41
vessels that transport
everything form cars and
trucks to military
equipment. The Baltic
Dry Index dropped like a
rock when the economic
downturn hit, reflecting
the woes of the shipping
industry. The index has
staged a comeback of
late,
but it could be just the
beginning. As for
International
Shipholding, the stock
carries a price-to-sales
ratio of just 0.6 and
trades for just under
five times earnings,
suggesting it is
extremely undervalued.
And with a yield of
close to 7.0% and a
payout ratio of 34%, the
dividend looks to be in
good shape, too.
-- Brad Briggs
Staff Writer
Street
Authority |
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