Motley Fool Money - What to Do with Dividends
Episode Date: June 27, 2023One key ingredient in Warren Buffett’s “Secret Sauce” is stocks that pay a dividend, but then you’ve got to let them simmer for a very long time. (00:21) Jim Gillies and Ricky Mulvey discuss...: - Walgreens Boot Alliance’s disappointing 3rd quarter. - The pharmacy chain’s turnaround story. - What to look for in investor presentations. - Why investors are cheering Brookfield’s $4.3 billion bid for life insurance company, American Equity. Plus, (11:54) Robert Brokamp and Matt Argersinger discuss the fundamentals and tradeoffs of owning dividend payers. Companies mentioned: WBA, BN, BAM, AEL, KO, AMX, MO, HD, AOS, PLD Links: Rule Your Retirement article: https://www.fool.com/premium/rule-your-retirement/coverage/1062/coverage/2023/05/26/how-buffetts-secret-sauce-could-pay-for-your-retir/ Dividend Knights list: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/1/d/1-OPCz9pXOcgFqmbMR3wxREg4O7ws_qWW8RWqKPYn1D4/edit#gid=0 Host: Ricky Mulvey Guests: Jim Gillies, Robert Brokamp, Matt Argersinger Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Walgreens takes its medicine, and you're listening to Motley Full Money.
Joining us now in high definition, it's Jim Gillies. Good to hear you and see you.
It's good to be heard and seen.
Walgreens Boot Alliance disappointed investors this morning with its third quarter results.
Beat revenue expectations, but it slashed earnings guidance.
The stock is down about 9, 10% as of this morning.
Jim, why was the market surprised that the pandemic tailwinds have worn off for this?
company?
Honestly, I don't know.
They've worn off for everyone else at this point.
You think this should have as well been already embedded in there.
But you say that they disappointed investors this morning.
As I prepped for this show, I got my first ever attempt to look at this company ever.
I've never really looked at it.
And my somewhat spicy take is they've been disappointing investors for the last decade.
I don't know why they're getting upset this morning.
Yeah.
I think it's been cut in half over the past.
over the past five years.
That includes the pandemic bounce.
Well, now CEO Rosalind Brewer is announcing a transformational cost management program.
Jim, maybe that'll get your attention.
The company is expecting $800 million in savings over the next year and taking a wide
approach to healthcare delivery for growth and primary care, specialty pharmacy.
Are you buying the turnaround story here?
I don't think I am.
And again, I am not well versed in this company.
I've just spent about an hour and a half looking at some of the things here.
But I basically approached this company as I would when I was looking at, if I would look at
any other company, but I was going to recommend it in one of the services where I contribute.
And kind of my starting point here is from the Oracle of Omaha, from Warren Buffett, which
is the pithy turnarounds rarely turn.
Doesn't mean they can't, but just that they are uphill battles.
And in Walgrey's Boots Alliance, we have a stock price that's lower than it was a decade ago.
the pandemic rise and fall. It's lower than a decade ago. They've demonstrated that this is
a company that can make a lot of cash when it wants to. And I'm talking about significantly pre-COVID.
It was making like in fiscal 18, they have an August fiscal year. So the end of August is
when we're talking about here. Fiscal 18, they did about just shy of $7 billion, about $6.9 billion
in the teeth of COVID. Compare that to fiscal year 2021. They did about $4.2 billion.
Fiscal 22, they did about $2.2.2 billion. This is going in the wrong direction, Ricky.
The last 12 months, last four quarters, they've been negative. And there's been a lot of puts and
takes, a lot of acquisitions, some divestitures. But, you know, this is a company that's got about
$12 billion in debt. Their dividend commitment, the yield today is about 6.7, 6.8% after the 10% drop in
the market. Dividend commitment is about 1.65 billion a year. As I mentioned,
they're actually cash, they've free cash flow negative over the past four quarters. And,
And this is a very, this is a very squishy thing I look at, but it's something I look at.
I looked at the earnings presentation that came along with this morning.
And the best word I can use to describe that presentation is busy.
Yeah.
They want to impress you with all the things that they have going on.
And I remember back in the dimly lit days, you know, when you're in school,
They would always encourage you to make your PowerPoint presentations simple, two or three
or four bullet points and your words flesh it out.
That's not how these presentations are structured.
To me, it's exhausting to look at this, and it just seems like they want to throw so much at
you that maybe you'll be distracted by the fact that, again, this is a company where the stock
price today is lower than it was a decade ago.
best like that dividend because it's probably that's all you're going to get for a while.
An $800 million cost savings per year, you know, that might come to fruition, but you can't spend
what you haven't yet delivered. As I mentioned, there's a lot of debt here. I don't imagine
that's gotten cheaper over the past 15 months, given the interest rate scenario we've been living
through. And valuation multiples are essentially also trading at 10-year lows. Some of that, you
would expect reflecting interest rates going up. And I think some of that's probable you can
put down to signaling investor disquiet with what's going on here. So, you know, I kind of look
at the presentation. I kind of look at everything they've given us and I say, you know, don't talk
to me about strong quality of earnings, which is one of the things that they actually put in there.
This feels like what I like to call a Missouri stock. You got to show me. And for the last decade,
They just don't look like they've shown anybody anything.
So I recognize I'm coming in kind of negative.
I don't wish I wasn't, but I had no incentive to look at this company after today, I don't think.
All right.
Well, I think we could leave it there, Jim.
I'm sorry.
Let's talk Canada a little bit.
Brookfield reinsurance, which is an arm or as you may describe it as a tentacle of Brookfield asset management,
made a cash in stock bid to buy American equity, invixtures.
investment lifeholding for $4.3 billion. It is a cash in stock deal. Why does Brookfield,
this huge conglomerate, why do they want to pay a hefty premium for this company that
sells indexed annuities and life insurance? Well, because it's a pretty great business.
And I will say, so the Brookfield, I do definitely use tentacles as my analogy. So with Brookfield,
you've got the mothership, which is Brookfield Corporation, ticker BN.
And then you've got a host of satellite or tentacles, if you will, one of which is Brookfield
reinsurance, which is BNRE.
And the structure, they spun that out, I think, in late 2020, but they also, I think they
own two-thirds of it or three-quarters of it still.
So the reason Brookfield does this is so you can choose to invest in which tentacle you want
or you can just invest in the mothership.
I own three or four of the Brookfield things at this point and just kind of smile along with them.
But this is the reinsurance deal. So, reinsurance has already acquired. They already own about
18.5% of AEL as of the most recent proxy. They've been kind of partners for a while.
They've been, I think, fairly open that they'd be, or signaling that they'd be open to acquiring
the rest of the company. So I'm not very surprised by this move. What I think,
here is interesting though is the so yeah so AEL sells indexed annuities right and what an indexed
annuity is is it pays out to the annuitant a specific rate based on the performance of an underlying
market index for example so like S&P 500 but the the nice part about this is that they they
don't track the full gain or loss there's usually a participation rate so for example if the
participation rate was 80%, just to pick a number.
And the annuity is indeed indexed to the S&P 500.
If the S&P 500 goes up, say, 10%, the annuitant gets 8%, right?
Because 80% of the participation rate times 10 is 8.
There also might be, and I don't know the specifics of AEL's contracts here, but there
might also be on some of these things.
It might be what's called a rate cap.
So let's say the rate cap is 7%.
So even if the participation rate says you should get 8, you should.
Well, you bump up against the 7% rate cap, so you know, you only get 7.
And why do this?
Well, I mean, I think it's reasonably obvious is that the company selling these annuities can
essentially invest the float coming in from annuitants into index funds.
I mean, you don't even need a brilliant investment strategy.
You can just buy index funds.
Earn the index return and capture the spread between the index return.
and what you've rate capped and participation rated out to your annuitants.
So, and that's just a fairly simple example at 10%.
Ask yourself, what happens if there's a 25% year in the S&P,
like the S&P just goes crazy.
So it can be very lucrative.
And I think it meshes nicely with Brookfield reinsurance when they came public.
They did a couple of things.
They did actually reinsurance on annuities.
So it's kind of they're now taking on both sides of the risk.
handle here it looks like to me.
Yeah.
For the buyer, it can be in a very expensive hedging strategy.
Some of them, they'll even pay you an upfront bonus for buying one of those annuities, Jim,
which I don't know what color flag you want to put on that, but I think it deserves raising
one.
American equity had some previous suitors, but for 55 bucks a share, it seems like this one's
going through.
This morning, the stock was trading around $53.
So not a whole lot of room for ARB games here.
No, like I said, because Brookfield reinsurance is.
already, I think they're probably the largest shareholder, not named Vanguard or Black Rock,
which of course are going to be index. They're just going to be index participants.
Brookfield probably can influence AEL's choice of suitor, shall we say? And I imagine they're
going, hey, why not us?
And then for the broader landscape, does this signal anything about mergers and acquisitions
to you? I mean, this seems to be a case where finally companies with a lot of dry powder
or getting ready to use it.
Yeah, I mean, I think through the pandemic, there was some dampening of a lot of mergers,
especially I follow a lot of little franchising companies and what have you
or that might buy restaurant companies that might like to buy concepts.
And there was a really big price disconnect during the pandemic.
The sellers wanted the price they would have gotten pre-pandemic.
And the prospective buyers were like, well, yeah, but the world's shut down.
So we don't want to pay you.
And so a lot of the companies that I follow really kind of just sat on their hands and, you know,
just husbanded cash or paid down debt.
And so, yeah, I mean, this is yet, to me, this is yet another example of as the world
has reopens as it has, you know, you start seeing companies going shopping.
And again, Brookfield makes a lot, Brookfield makes a lot of deals.
And, you know, while I don't believe fully that there's no limit to their dry power,
as you call it, they've probably got more dry powder than most.
So or access to capital, I suppose, is the way we can better frame it.
But yeah, this is, I like to see this kind of stuff because this is what Brookfield does
through their various tentacles.
So I'm a fan of this one.
High fidelity Jim Gillies.
Good to see it.
Appreciate you joining me today.
Thank you.
Investing doesn't have to be complex, but it usually takes a really long time to see any results.
Matt Argersinger joins Robert Brokamp to talk about the power of owning dividend-paying stocks and the fundamentals of owning them.
Quick note, Mattie A references Bro's recent article a few times.
It's called How Buffett's Secret Sauce could pay for your retirement, and it's available to members of the Motley Full Service rule your retirement.
We'll include a link in the show notes.
In the most recent Berkshire Hathaway annual letter, Warren Buffett devoted several paragraphs to what he called, quote-unquote, the secret sauce.
A key ingredient in that sauce's recipe was dividends.
So Buffett wrote that by 1994, Berkshire had invested $1.3 billion in Coca-Cola and the same amount in American Express by 1995.
And in those years, Berkshire received dividends worth $75 million from Coke and $41 million from American Express.
Now, you fast forward to the end of 2022, and the dividends Berkshire received had grown to $704 million from Coke and $302 million from American Express.
And while the growth of dividend payouts from those two companies was definitely remarkable,
investors in the SEP 500 also did pretty well.
So here are the annualized growth rates of the dividends paid by Buffett's two stocks as well as the dividends from the SEP 500 compared to inflation since 1994.
So Koch's dividend grew an annualized 8.3% a year.
American Express's dividends 7.7%.
The SEP 500 is dividend 6% and inflation 2.6%.
So, Matt, this may not be surprising to you since you're the advice.
for a dividend-oriented service here at the Motley Fool.
But give us your take on the perhaps underappreciated role that dividends play in building
long-term wealth.
Yes, totally underappreciated, bro.
And thanks for having me on the show.
I loved your article because also underappreciated, but also maybe a misconception a little bit,
is Warren Buffett, you know, I think people think Warren Buffett doesn't like dividends
because Berkshire Hathaway has never paid a dividend, at least as long as he's been CEO.
And so there's this feeling out there that Al Buffett just doesn't like dividends.
But boy, does he like to invest in dividends.
And not just companies that pay dividends, but as your article points out,
companies that grow their dividends over time in Coca-Cola and American Express are awesome examples.
And when that dividend growth exceeds the rate of inflation, especially, that's like the secret
or the magic sauce to investing.
And it's something I focus on in our dividend investor service.
And dividends are truly magical.
If you look at data going back to the early 70s, there's various reports.
S&P Global's got some data.
Hartford Funds has done a report.
You'll learn that companies that not only pay dividends, but grow their dividends over many years,
are really the best performing stocks.
If you look at dividend payers, for example, going back to the early 70s, they've returned
about 9.6% per year.
That's a full 100 basis points better than the equal-weighted S&P 500.
But if you look at dividend growers, especially a couple examples you gave, those companies
have grown their by about 10.7 percent annually on a total return basis, trouncing the
rest of the market.
And by the way, more than double the return of companies that didn't pay a dividend over time.
So I know Warren Buffett knows this.
We know this.
And it's no surprise that that's where he chooses to invest.
It's probably where we should be investing as well.
That's surprising because I think over the last.
last several years, for sure, people have been focusing more on growth stocks. Many of them don't
pay dividends. So it's probably surprising that over the long term, companies that are able to
generate that type of cash and grow it at a rate that exceeds inflation are actually some of
the best stocks to own. Absolutely. It's where I've really, I wouldn't say pivoted, but I've
really refocused my own portfolio, really the core of my portfolio around dividend companies,
especially dividend growth companies. Okay, so it's nice to get paid by a company you own.
But then you have to decide what to do with it.
Most investors default to automatic reinvestment, which is basically uses the cash to buy more
shares of the dividend pair.
It's really an excellent way to build wealth because you gradually accumulate more shares,
which pay you more dividends, which then can be used to buy even more shares and so on.
I call it the dividend snowball.
Let's illustrate it with some numbers from the DRIP calculator, DRIP
Reinvestment Plan, calculator found at DividendChannel.com.
So let's say you invests $10,000 into the Spider S&P 500, the TRIP 500, the TRIP
ticker, SPY, spy, as many people call it. So you put in that $10,000 at the beginning of 2000.
And that would have bought you 68.8 shares. But if you reinvested the dividends, your share
count would have grown to 103.2 as of the end of this May. In other words, you basically grew
your share count by about 50%. But over this period, the quarterly dividend paid by each share of the
ETF grew more than fourfold in value. But you have more shares paying that dividend. So the total
amount of cash that you received grew sixfold. So all told, your investment grew from $10,000
to $42,787 in large part due to dividend reinvestment. So that's the power of automatic
dividend reinvestment. But you don't have to do that. Like you have choices. So, Matt, what's your take
on how people should decide what to do with their dividends? Yes. It's a great topic.
And I love your dividends snowball idea. The example that always gets me, bro, is all true.
group. I'm sure you know this, but formerly the Philip Morris Company and putting aside
for a second how we feel about cigarettes or tobacco. But consider this. If you invested $100
in Altria's stock in 1972, so that's just over 50 years ago, that would have turned into
$18,000 today. Wow. That's a remarkable turn. However, if you invested that same $100,
but reinvested the dividends along the way, that same $100, I still can't believe this.
would have turned into $2.8 million dollars.
Yes, it is, it's mind-blowing.
And it's kind of remarkable when you think about it, too.
I mean, the rate of smoking has declined almost every year since the mid-60s
when the U.S. Surgeon General kind of made the famous release about the dangers of cigarette smoking.
So Altria has not been a growth company.
It's been far from it.
But what it has been able to do is pay a dividend and grow its dividend over time.
and get that dividend snowball effect that you talk about.
Now, imagine finding a company, unlike Altry,
that actually operates a growing business in a growing industry
and pays a dividend that grows over time.
That would be a dividend snowball.
But as to whether automatically reinvest your dividend,
I think there's some real strengths to just doing that,
like doing a drip, because it's simple.
It just happens without you knowing about it.
It takes emotion out of it.
It takes decision-making out of the equation
because you're not deciding how you need to invest that capital,
once you get it. I do that for a portion of my dividend stocks, mostly that I hold in retirement
accounts. But personally, in my taxable account, especially, I tend to do what Buffett does.
I like to let the dividend cash accumulate, and then I kind of pick and choose where to invest.
It probably subjects me to more mistakes, but I kind of like being able to target where I think
I'm going to get the most growth from each incremental dollar that I invest. So I kind of like to get the
cash and then deploy it later on. I took an informal survey of the folks who are analysts here
the Motley Fold. What do you do with your dividends? And a large portion of them did what you did.
So sometimes automatic reinvest, sometimes be more deliberate with your dividends. But most
the people actually just automatically reinvest, which I thought was interesting. As for me,
I often do it based on where I see valuations. If I think stocks are cheap, I reinvest.
If I feel like I want to build up more cash, I just stop reinvesting most of my stocks, not all
of them. Right. Yeah, I think there's merits of being kind of tactical about your investment.
Yeah. Okay. So, we've demonstrated that you can use dividend-paying stocks to build up a nice chunk of change. For most people, they're going to want to use that chunk of change to retire. So you have these stocks that are paying dividends. Now you could turn off the reinvestment and use those dividends to pay your bills in retirement. But many retirees will say, like, I'm not comfortable with too much in my portfolio in stocks because they're so volatile. But to be more accurate, stock prices are volatile. Dividends actually can be remarked.
remarkably reliable. So, consider the dividend history of the S.P. 500. So starting in
1958, which was the first full year for the index, there have been only nine calendar years
when the dividends paid by the companies in the S&P 500 were lower in one year than they were
in the previous year. In other words, they dropped. And the average decline across those nine
years was just 5.3% in the dividend payouts. And that really figure is, that figure skewed by
two years when the drop was really significant. So in 1959, dividends dropped about 13%. And
2009, dividends dropped about 22%. By far, the worst year for dividends since the 1950s.
Most recent drop was just recently, right?
2021 due to the financial fallout from the pandemic.
But even that event, you know, when the global economy partially shut down, it resulted
in a decline in payouts of just 2.6 percent, and they rebounded pretty quickly.
So, Matt, what do you say to people who may be uncomfortable relying on dividend-paying stocks in
retirement?
I'd say, and just exactly what you just went through, it just shows that dividends are much
more reliable. You really don't have to worry if you're focused on the income that you're
getting rather than the stock price fluctuation. I just love the data you cited. I think
a derivative of that is actually, you can look at how dividends stocks tend to perform during
bear markets. Charles Schwab did a great study looking at every major bear market since the 1970s.
And all about one of them, in the great financial crisis that you mentioned, the really bad year
for dividends, all about one of them, high-yield stocks vastly outperformed.
And I think the only reason they didn't hold up in the 2007-2009 episode is a lot of
those high-yielders were going into the crisis where banks or real estate companies, they
were hit especially hard.
But yeah, look at the bear market.
But look at the bear market we had last year, 2022.
The S&P 500 on a total return basis fell about 18%.
But if you, example, if you look at the Schwabreux.
U.S. Equity ETF dividend, for example, that's one of the larger, more popular dividend ETFs.
It fell only 3%.
So having a good portion of your portfolio, even the core part of your portfolio in dividend stocks,
can really make a difference during bare markets and periods of volatility.
And I don't think you have to worry about having a large exposure there, if we're entering
a recession or bare market, because if you just focus on the income, like you said, that's going to be
relatively consistent. That might fall a little bit.
it, but it's not going to fall that much, and it'll probably rebound a lot faster than
stocks tend to.
Okay, so we're talking about all the great things about dividend investing, but like everything
in the world of investing, there's always good things that come with the bad.
So what are some of the drawbacks of dividend investing?
Yeah, there are a few I can think of.
I mean, one was the sort of reinvestment risk I cited above, right?
Do you choose to reinvest or not reinvest?
If you don't reinvest, you kind of have to make a decision.
There's risk to that.
If you do reinvest, maybe you're investing dividends.
in a bad company over time, and you're not following it because you're just sort of automatically
investing, and that maybe leads you astray. There's also, you know, taxes that come into
play. If you hold stocks, dividend stocks in a taxable account, you do have to pay taxes.
And sometimes popular dividend-paying stocks like real estate investment trust, reeds, they don't
qualify for the lower rate. So you usually paying, you know, your marginal tax rate on those dividends.
I think the other challenge when it comes to dividend-paying companies, and this is because
of the nature, I think, of the sectors or the economy they come from, they're going to tend
to fall behind and underperform when we have fast-rising bull markets. So, yeah, like you mentioned
earlier, you know, just the tech bull run that we had, the gross, those gross stocks, right?
Well, dividend stocks did kind of underperform during that period of time. In fact, you can take
this year as an example. We're about six months through 2023. The S&P is up about 15%.
The NASDAQ 100 is up around 35%. Most dividend funds,
and indexes I follow are pretty much flat. I think that can be discouraging if you're an investor.
And sometimes it can cause you to think to kind of give up and think, I need to start chasing
the high flyers. I'm falling behind. And I think that's where the mistake comes in. Because,
as we discussed, over time, dividend payers, dividend growers especially, can really work their
magic for your portfolio. And you have to stay invested in them over time.
Yeah, I'll highlight a few things relative to what you said. First of all, I think one thing
is sector diversification. The dividend payers are in a handful of sectors, generally speaking,
and you saw that in 2008. All you did was focus on dividend payers, you got walloped. So you've
got to pay attention to that. The taxes are definitely an issue while you're working,
which is why it's probably better to keep your dividend payers mostly in retirement accounts.
When you retire, though, they're great to have because of that qualified dividend. It's not only
inflation being income, it's tax-advantaged income. That's sort of an opposite side of that coin.
But the one thing I think it's important to point out is that dividends aren't a free lunch, right?
It's basically a company selling a piece of itself just in the form of cash.
If your company pays out $100 million dividend, it's basically worthless now.
In most cases, the stock price will adjust accordingly.
So it's not like it's magical money.
It's really what the dividend represents, that it's a company that is consistently generating cash and very comfortable that can grow that cash at a rate that exceeds inflation.
That's right. That's right. And so you have to be aware that you're right. The dividend is coming out of cash. It's coming out of the company's earnings. So you want to focus on companies where, you know, that have, you know, long-term competitive advantages, high profit margins, lots of cash so that they can continue paying and growing that dividend over time. It does make you need to do that extra analysis to make sure that the company that's paying you the dividend is going to continue paying it.
Okay. So we've hopefully gotten the audience curious about dividend investing. How do you find good dividend-paying investments?
Oh, that's a good question. How much time do we have? It can be hard, but I think one area
that investors might be familiar with is if you look at something like the dividend aristocrats or
dividend achievers, companies that have a track record of paying and growing their dividend for many
years, in some cases, decades. There's the dividend Kings, which have remarkably raised their
dividend every year for over 50 years. It's still mind-blowing to me.
I think there are limitations to that, though. One thing that I've come up with is a concept
called the dividend Nights, and it kind of uses a rule of 10. It looks at companies that have
paid a dividend for 10 years, grown that dividend by a compound annual rate of at least 10%
over 10 years, and maybe most importantly, beaten the market's total return over 10 years.
So these are like, I call them like the creme de la creme of dividend growth companies,
fast-growing dividend companies that just consistently have outperformed and beaten the market.
There's obviously a lot going right for these companies.
Some examples include A.O. Smith, Nike, Prologis, the Home Depot, which probably everyone is familiar with.
These are some of the dividend nights out there.
But for us in our dividend investor service, it's been a great source of ideas as we're trying to kind of home in on the dividend growers,
but companies that really can stand the test of time.
And as we started the show up, just really consistently outperforming inflation with their dividends.
And if you can find those and isolate just a few of those over your investing career,
just as we show with, gosh, with Altria's a one example, but Coca-Cola American Express.
I'm really trying to find those dividend growers of the future right there.
As always, people on the program may own stocks mentioned in the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations
for or against. So don't buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear. I'm Rakeem Alvi.
Thanks for listening. We'll be back tomorrow.
