Quote:
Originally Posted by chichirone
I am looking to buy more of it. KMI and COP. Not much more but maybe another $1000 of each. It's what I am comfortable with when having some discomfort with the market.
I read this today as well and was curious what people think about these types of dividend yield suggestions posted by Marketwatch.
By Philip van Doorn, MarketWatch
Looking at free cash flow is very important when picking a dividend stock
If you are an investor relying on stock dividends for income, you want to be sure that the company will be able to continue making the payments, and maybe even raise the dividend at some point.
Back in December, we published a list of dividend stocks for solid income while U.S. interest rates remain low. Since then, long-term interest rates have stayed low, with 10-year U.S. Treasury notes yielding 2.14% on Tuesday, which was actually a pretty significant increase from 2.05% on Friday, as investors looked ahead to next week's policy speech by Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen.
The previous list included S&P 500 (SPX) companies with dividend yields of more than 3.5%, that had sufficient free cash flow over the previous 12 months to make it appear that the companies were well positioned to raise their dividends.
Free cash flow is a company's remaining cash flow after capital expenditures. We can calculate a "cash flow yield" by dividing cash flow per share, for a particular 12-month period, by the share price. If the resulting figure is higher than the dividend, the company has "headroom" to increase the dividend.
This approach was suggested by Bill McMahon, the chief investment officer of Thomas Partners, back in May.
So what has changed since then we published our previous list in December? For one thing, 334 S&P 500 companies have had their 2015 earnings estimates cut since the beginning of the year. Two big reasons for this are the decline in oil prices and the rising value of the dollar (EURUSD) against the euro, which means higher prices for exports and declining sales for many companies.
So we thought it would be useful not only to consider the past 12 months' free cash flow, but to look ahead using the consensus free-cash-flow estimates for 2015, among analysts polled by FactSet. This data isn't available for every S&P 500 stock. But a list confined to companies for which the data is available indicates continued headroom to raise dividends is certainly a more conservative one.
Here are the highest-yielding S&P 500 stocks, with headroom to raise dividends based on the past 12 months and consensus 2015 free-cash-flow estimates:
Company Ticker Free cash flow yield - past 12 months Free cash flow yield - 2015 estimate Dividend yield Headroom - past 12 months Headroom - 2015 estimate
Windstream Holdings PLC 13.91% 12.36% 11.19% 2.72% 1.17%
Mattel Inc. 9.48% 5.95% 5.50% 3.98% 0.45%
CenturyLink Inc. 9.57% 11.50% 5.47% 4.09% 6.02%
AT&T Inc. 5.48% 7.38% 5.42% 0.06% 1.96%
Frontier Communications Corp. Class B 8.57% 10.56% 4.77% 3.79% 5.79%
Verizon Communications Inc. 6.56% 8.19% 4.46% 2.10% 3.73%
Plum Creek Timber Co. 4.77% 4.92% 4.02% 0.75% 0.90%
GameStop Corp. Class A 5.63% 11.41% 3.53% 2.09% 7.87%
Seagate Technology Inc. 11.66% 10.56% 3.49% 8.17% 7.07%
Garmin Ltd. 4.26% 5.52% 3.43% 0.83% 2.08%
Source: FactSet
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I have COP as well, only because my dad works for Halliburton on their (Conoco's) shale plays, so I have decent visibility on how things are doing.
yea its alot lower than where I initially bought it, but they arent cutting back nearly as bad as some of the other oil companies in the area.