This ‘resilient’ dividend stock strategy can limit risks to your portfolio

0
169


(This is the fifth in a series about dividend stocks in today’s low interest-rate environment based on interviews with professional investors. Links to the previous four articles are below.)

Why does a fund that has underperformed its benchmark for the past five, 10 and 15 years have $20.4 billion in it? The answer is that investors with long memories are still willing to pay professionals not only to screen stocks for quality but to gain further insight through access to management.

This may be especially important with systemic risks from the trade conflict with China and Brexit as the U.K. tries to leave the European Union, along with signs of a slowing U.S. economy.

The Franklin Rising Dividends Fund












FRDPX, -1.02%










seeks to achieve capital growth by investing at least 80% in companies that consistently raise their dividends. It makes no difference how high a stock’s current yield is.

The fund has blown away its benchmark — the S&P 500 index












SPX, +1.08%










—over a 20-year horizon, largely because of strong outperformance in the wake of the dot-com bubble and following the Great Recession. But it has struggled more recently, as a handful of technology stocks — which don’t meet its investing criteria — have led the market.

“Companies that have demonstrated sustained dividend growth tend to hold up well in challenging markets,” Nicholas Getaz, a manager of the fund said during an interview. He has co-managed the fund since 2014. Donald Taylor has been the lead manager since 1996. The other co-manager is Matt Quinlan.

‘Resilience’ and Microsoft

“We use very careful analysis of the resilience of any position,” Getaz said. He named Microsoft












MSFT, +1.17%,










the fund’s largest holding, as an example of a company with the advantages he and his colleagues are looking for, including “a leading market position, products that are industry norms and standards, innovative growth drivers and a business model that increases resilience.”

He was referring to the distribution model for Microsoft Office 365. Users pay annual subscriptions and get continual updates and cloud storage services. This brings in more revenue than the old model, when a user might wait many years before upgrading to a newer version and paying again.

Microsoft’s sales for its fiscal 2019 ended June 30 were up 12% from the previous year, while operating income was up 20%. The company’s earnings show very strong numbers for various office and cloud services segments.

Microsoft is paying a quarterly dividend of 46 cents on its common shares, which makes for a yield of only 1.33%, based on the closing price of $137.86 on Aug. 30. Then again, the company increased its dividend by four cents, or 9.5%, in September 2018. With such strong numbers, it is reasonable to expect the company to increase the dividend again by a significant amount later this month.

Looking back, Microsoft has increased its dividend by amounts ranging from 7.7% to 25% each year over the past nine years. During 2009, the company left the dividend unchanged, which wasn’t surprising considering how long the postcrisis recovery took and how many companies were forced to cut their payouts.

Microsoft provides an excellent example of improving yield-to-cost. If you purchased shares of Microsoft at the close on Aug. 29, 2014 and decided not to reinvest your dividends (to keep our math simple), you would have paid $45.43 a share. The quarterly dividend at that time was 28 cents a share, for a dividend yield of 2.47%. Fast-forward five years and the current dividend yield on the shares is only 1.33%. But based on your original price of $45.43 and the current quarterly payout of 46 cents, the yield-to-cost for your shares is 4.05%. That’s not bad, especially when you keep in mind that the share price has more than tripled.

‘Culture investors’

Of course not every company that steadily increases its dividend will triple its share price in five years, as Microsoft has.

Getaz said he, the other fund managers and their analysts follow “a debate-driven consensus-oriented process,” to narrow down investment candidates after an initial screen that includes:

• Dividend increases during at least eight of the past 10 years, with no cuts.

• A payout ratio below 65% of earnings.

If a company stops meeting that criteria, “we won’t add” to positions, Getaz said. But the fnd managers might not sell should they believe the condition is temporary or if it would otherwise be an inopportune moment to sell.

Following the screens, Getaz and his colleagues focus on analyzing business models to “be reasonably sure” that the next 10 years will be successful, after looking back 10 years during the initial screening process.

Getaz emphasized the access Franklin Templeton has to corporate management teams as a crucial component of the team’s management strategy. It’s obvious that corporate executives cannot tell Getaz anything that wouldn’t be disclosed publicly. However, the meetings can shed light on a company’ strengths and weaknesses, he said.

“One of the advantages with meeting with management is taking a sampling, over the long term, of how they answer the same question,” he said.

Franklin Templeton Investments


Nicholas Getaz, co-portfolio manager of the Franklin Rising Dividends Fund.

“I call us ‘culture investors’ to some extent,” Getaz said. After starting with senior executives, he tries to talk to divisional leaders as well, to “produce a mosaic.”

A company with a strong culture from the top down can “often find a way to prosper through difficult environments” because it can continue to innovate and make operational improvements, he added.

“That is a real benefit to sitting down with a CEO or CFO,” Getaz said. “Whenever I meet with leadership, I always ask them to in their own words characterize the company’s culture. Some are less passionate; some have been incredibly passionate.”

Two other companies Getaz discussed with cultures he admires are Linde PLC












LIN, +0.18%










 (a position reflecting the fund’s previous investment in Praxair, which Linde acquired in May) and Air Products and Chemicals












APD, +0.82%.









When discussing Air Products and Chemicals, Getaz said, “boring is beautiful.” Discounting the “excitement premium” put on some stocks, he said there are advantages holding companies that focus on operational excellence rather than branding.

He said the industrial gasses provided by Linde and Air Products “play a pivotal role in production techniques,” as well as health care (the giant oxygen tanks you see outside hospitals, for example) and even energy production.

Fund holdings

Here are the 15 largest holdings (out of 64) of the Franklin Rising Dividends Fund as of July 31:

Company Ticker % of fund Dividend yield Total return – 2019 through Aug. 30
Microsoft Corp.












MSFT, +1.17%









6.9% 1.33% 37%
Roper Technologies Inc.












ROP, +1.93%









6.2% 0.50% 38%
Stryker Corp.












SYK, +0.40%









4.4% 0.94% 42%
Accenture PLC Class A












ACN, +1.00%









3.9% 1.47% 42%
Honeywell International Inc.












HON, +2.21%









3.6% 1.99% 27%
Linde PLC












LIN, +0.18%









3.5% 1.85% 23%
Air Products and Chemicals Inc.












APD, +0.82%









3.5% 2.05% 43%
Becton, Dickinson and Co.












BDX, +2.69%









3.5% 1.21% 13%
Texas Instruments Inc.












TXN, +2.34%









3.5% 2.49% 34%
Medtronic PLC












MDT, +0.18%









3.4% 2.00% 20%
Analog Devices Inc.












ADI, +2.64%









3.2% 1.97% 30%
Albemarle Corp.












ALB, +1.79%









2.7% 2.38% -19%
West Pharmaceutical Services Inc.












WST, +2.11%









2.2% 0.44% 49%
Ross Stores, Inc.












ROST, +0.90%









2.2% 0.96% 28%
General Dynamics Corp.












GD, +0.76%









2.2% 2.13% 24%
McDonald’s Corp.












MCD, +0.63%









2.1% 2.13% 25%
United Technologies Corp.












UTX, +1.61%









2.0% 2.26% 24%
Source: FactSet
Performance

The Franklin Rising Dividends Fund has various share classes with different annual expense ratios, depending on how shares are distributed. So if you consider purchasing shares of this or any other fund, it’s very important to consider the entire expense picture, including the annual fee for your investment adviser (if you have one). The adviser’s portion of your total fee may vary depending on the share class.

The Class A shares












FRDPX, -1.02%










 have a 5.5% sales charge (or load); however, that is typically avoided as it is currently set up with distribution through advisers. The Class A shares have annual expenses of 0.88% of assets, a level considered “low” by Morningstar for actively managed funds in its Large Growth fund category.

We are using the Class A shares for the following total-return comparisons because that is the oldest share class.

Total returns (with dividends reinvested and excluding any sales charges) for the Franklin Rising Dividends Fund’s Class A shares have lagged those of the S&P 500 for various long periods, with Getaz pointing out that the outperformance during the financial crisis has “rolled off,” because more than 10 years have passed since the postcrisis low in March 2009. But the performance pattern is fascinating as you look further back.

First, here’s a comparison of average annual returns for various periods through Aug. 30:

Average return – 3 years Average return – 5 years Average return – 10 years Average return – 15 years Average return – 20 years
Franklin Rising Dividends Fund – Class A 11.7% 9.7% 12.5% 8.2% 8.4%
S&P 500 index 12.6% 10.1% 13.4% 9.0% 6.1%
Source: FactSet

The fund has underperformed for all periods on the table except 20 years, for which it has outperformed considerably. The 20-year outperformance (illustrated in the second chart below) is quite similar to the pattern of performance for Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway












BRK.B, +0.64%











BRK.A, +0.65%










 .

Getaz said the fund’s underperformance against the index over the past five years reflects the very strong performance of Apple












AAPL, +1.70%










 and the rest of the FAANG group (Facebook












FB, +2.60%,










Amazon.com












AMZN, +0.60%,










Netflix












NFLX, +0.77%










 and Google holding company Alphabet












GOOG, +1.11%











GOOGL, +1.09%.









These companies haven’t meet the fund’s criteria for dividend growth, but they have been viewed by investors as “a collective high-growth theme,” Getaz said. He also said that over the past 12 to 18 months, “the market seems to have broadened its appetite for quality, which we believe has benefited the [fund’s] strategy.”

These two charts point to two remarkable aspects of the performance of the fund and the benchmark index.

First, 15-year total returns through Aug. 30:

FactSet


And now 20 years:

FactSet


The fund has greatly outperformed the S&P 500 for 20 years. It’s also worth pointing out that the S&P 500’s 20-year total return is significantly lower than its 15-year return, while the fund’s 20-year performance is much greater than its 15-year return.

“The 20 year look-back captures both the financial crisis, as well as the dot-com crash,” Getaz said, illustrating his point about higher-quality stocks providing stability as part of an investor’s portfolio.

Recent articles on dividend-stock investing in a world of very low interest rates:

25 dividend stocks selected for value by an outperforming money manager

This dividend-stock strategy is for investors who want an attractive monthly income stream

Seeking attractive dividend stocks? Here’s how to separate winners from losers

3 dividend stock picks with yields as high as 12% from a manager who doesn’t focus on dividends



Source : MTV