Now below is an article from Inquirer Business about
dividends considering the present performance of the Philippine Stock Market. It also adds to what we already know about dividends:
"Dividends, which are paid by companies regularly to shareholders and taken from earnings, are one way of boosting shareholder value. Dividend payments can also be a gauge of financial well-being of companies. They may come in the form of cash, stock, or property. Property dividends—which can be shares in a subsidiary company or physical assets—are rare, though. Over the past 12 months, the only Philippine companies that have distributed property dividends are Manila Electric Co. and RFM Corp."Now we know what a property dividend is! J
image from moneygurado.blogspot.com |
Here are some of the highlights of the article sharing
some of the analysts’ expectation of the performance of the Philippine Stock
Market
- Steady and increasing dividends from companies that are past their high-growth phase are often an indication of sound fundamentals and say a lot about future prospects.
- The Philippine companies that are likely to declare good dividends this year include those from the telecom, utilities and media sectors
- For this year, Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co., Globe Telecom Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands, Semirara Mining Corp. Aboitiz Power Corp., Manila Water Co Inc., First Philippine Holdings Corp., ABS-CBN Corp. and GMA Network Inc. are among companies that are likely to declare good dividends, she says. Filinvest Land Inc. also offers high rate of dividends.
Read the whole article below: http://business.inquirer.net/55267/dividends-as-added-attraction-to-investors
For dividend-oriented stock
investors, the rest of 2012 has a lot of promise as many analysts project
stable, if not higher, payouts from listed companies.
Steady
and increasing dividends from companies that are past their high-growth phase
are often an indication of sound fundamentals and say a lot about future
prospects. The Philippine companies that are likely to declare good dividends
this year include those from the telecom, utilities and media sectors, analysts
say.
Amid low interest rates and volatile
markets, dividends are likely to be an incentive for new and existing investors
to own stocks.
“You can view it from this perspective.
If a stock is cheap in terms of valuation (low price-to-earnings, low
price-to-book ratios) and I like its long-term fundamental outlook, I would be
more inclined to buy it if it can give me a cash dividend that will match what
I expect to earn from my placement in the bank,” says April Lee-Tan, research
head at CitisecOnline.
Lee-Tan adds that “cash dividends
should at worst be flat compared to 2011,” noting that companies in general
have room to increase cash dividends provided that profits increased in the
past year.
Likely big payers
For this year, Philippine Long Distance
Telephone Co., Globe Telecom Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands, Semirara
Mining Corp. Aboitiz Power Corp., Manila Water Co Inc., First Philippine
Holdings Corp., ABS-CBN Corp. and GMA Network Inc. are among companies that are
likely to declare good dividends, she says. Filinvest Land Inc. also offers
high rate of dividends because its share price is depressed and valuation is
cheap, she adds.
Dividends, which are paid by companies
regularly to shareholders and taken from earnings, are one way of boosting
shareholder value. Dividend payments can also be a gauge of financial
well-being of companies. They may come in the form of cash, stock, or property.
Property dividends—which can be shares in a subsidiary company or physical
assets—are rare, though. Over the past 12 months, the only Philippine companies
that have distributed property dividends are Manila Electric Co. and RFM Corp.
Investment driver
Companies that are still growing,
however, rarely offer dividends as they opt to reinvest all of their profits to
help sustain high growth.
“Dividends are becoming an important
driver (of investments) especially in this all-time low-interest rate
environment,” says Paul Joseph Garcia, senior vice president and equity fund
manager at Bank of the Philippine Islands. He points out that the share of
dividends to the total return of the stock market over the past 10 years was
about 40 percent. Although capital appreciation is the main source of returns,
dividends are proving to be a significant contributor.
Also, dividends are taxed 10 percent
for resident individual investors and zero for corporate investors compared to
20 percent withholding tax for fixed income investments, he says.
“Dividend play will be important this
year,” says Garcia. “Investors now are very conscious about investing in
companies that give dividends. Right now, that’s the trend that we’re seeing.”
Market participants say one can’t blame
investors for this trend. Last year, for instance, the Philippine Stock
Exchange Index registered a 4.5-percent rise while the average dividend yield
was about 3 percent, resulting in total return of around 7.5 percent. Dividend
yield is calculated by dividing the annual dividends per share with the price per
share.
Impressive returns
This kind of return is indeed
impressive considering the slower economic growth and challenging external
market environment last year as the eurozone debt crisis mounted.
In its listing of top dividend yields
since 2009 in February, stock brokerage DA Market Securities ranked as No. 1
infrastructure holding firm Metro Pacific Investments Corp. with 9.34 percent
average dividend yield, followed by PLDT (7.32 percent), Globe (6.78 percent),
GMA 7 (4.14 percent) and Pepsi Philippines (3.82 percent). Also on the top 10
of its list were ABS-CBN, China Bank, Nickel Asia, Semirara Mining and Bank of
the Philippine Islands. In all cases, those dividend yields either compensated
for the decline in stock prices or enhanced the total returns.
Jose Vistan, research head at AB
Capital Securities, sees dividend yields declining this year due to flat
earnings growth last year, although they may be higher in absolute or peso
terms.
He cautions that when it comes to
investing, dividends should be an added, rather than the main, attraction.
“It’s hard to find companies that pay
dividends that are higher than the money market,” Vistan says. “In this low
interest-rate environment, investors would like to invest in the
dividend-paying companies as an added incentive.”