Is it possible that a stock investment
makes sense both from a capital gain point of view as well as dividend point of
view. Unlikely, since it is like pulling a rope from two different directions.
As company’s share price increases (resulting in capital gains), its dividend
yield (defined as dividends/stock price) falls for the simple reason that as
the denominator in the equation (stock price) increases, the yield decreases. A
perusal of top stocks (in the table) clearly shows that if they are high on
capital gains, they are definitely low on dividend yield.
The table lays out this dilemma by looking
at the past five years average on both dividend yield and price performance.
Among the large caps, if the stock tops the list on dividend yield, it lags in
price returns and vice-versa. For eg. NTPC has a healthy dividend yield of 2.6%
while it has a negative price performance of 5%. Where the price performance is
very healthy (for eg., Tata Motors at 64%), then the dividend yield is 1.4%[1].
There may be minor exceptions to this but in general if the dividend yield is
healthy, then price performance is poor. Large caps generally suffer from this
tension where if it scores well on capital appreciation, it tends to lag on
dividend yield. A good example would be Kotak Mahindra Bank, whose capital
appreciation was a healthy 32% annualized for the last 5 years, while its
dividend yield average is a paltry 0.1%.
So, if we chase dividend yields, then we
may risk incurring capital loss and if we chase capital appreciation, then we
have to settle down for paltry dividend yields. However, if we can find
companies that not only produce good capital appreciation but also pays
handsome dividends, then that is a list worth looking at. After quantitative
research, here is such a list.
Stellar Stocks
|
Years since inception
|
Mcap (USD mn)
|
5Yrs CAGR*
|
5yrs avg DY
|
Hexaware Technologies Ltd
|
17
|
726
|
66%
|
5%
|
Supreme Industries Ltd
|
20
|
1,247
|
79%
|
3%
|
Finolex Industries Ltd
|
20
|
588
|
41%
|
6%
|
SRF Ltd
|
20
|
619
|
25%
|
5%
|
VST Industries Ltd
|
20
|
391
|
51%
|
5%
|
Aarti Drugs Ltd
|
18
|
137
|
43%
|
5%
|
Source: Reuters
*Compounded Average Growth Rate
As we can see, the list not only combines
strong price performance, they also enjoy high dividend yields. Let us look at
them a bit closely.
Hexaware Technologies is the erstwhile Aptech which is now renamed as Hexaware. The
company’s share price increased at the rate of 66% p.a. thanks to robust annual
growth in top line (22%) and bottom-line (30%) with the price to earnings ratio
holding in tact at 10. However, what is surprising is the equal performance on
the dividend yield where the D/Y increased from a modest 1.5% in 2009 to 8.4%
in 2013 thanks to dividend pay-out increasing from 16% in 2009 to 88% in 2013.
Supreme Industries, is a Mumbai based company that belongs to Thaparia group. The
company is into plastics and plastic products. Over the years, the share price
improved from Rs.76 in 2009 to Rs. 425 at the end of 2013, yielding an annualized
return of close to 80%. The stock is currently trading at Rs. 588. Over this
period, the company enjoyed a top line annualized growth of 19% and a bottom-line
growth of 16%p.a. However, the capital gain was achieved more due to a p/e
rerating that improved from 6.25 to 19. The dividend pay-out ratio has also
increased from 29% to 36% though not dramatic. The average dividend yield
during the 5 year period was 3%, which though not very high is not bad at all.
Finolex Industries, is a Pune based Petrochem company belonging to the Finolex group.
The share price improved from Rs. 56 in 2009 to Rs.167 at the end of 2013
implying an annualized return of 41%. The current share price is even better at
Rs. 327 as of 12/11/2014. Being in a commodity industry, where the margins are
low, the top line and bottom-line growth was a modest 14% and 6% p.a. However
the robust capital gains was made possible by a p/e rerating from 5.2 in 2009
to 12.2 in 2013. During this period, the dividend pay-out also increased from
28% to 51% causing the dividend yield to increase as well. The 5-year average
dividend yield was an impressive 6%.
SRF Ltd, is
a Delhi based Bharat Ram group company mainly into textiles. This is a strange
entry into the list. Its share price performed at 25% annualized during the
last five years though its recent profitability has shown a decline from Rs.253
crores in 2013 to Rs. 162 crores in 2014. The company’s top line has been
growing at a rate of 13% p.a. during the last five years. The declining profits
is more than compensated by the rerating of the p/e that increased from 3.68 in
2009 to 12.7 at the end of March 2014. The company has a generous pay-out of
35% leading to impressive dividend yield of 5% during the last five years.
VST Industries, is a Hyderabad based multinational company selling tobacco
products. The company’s share price increased at the rate of 51% p.a. during
the last five years aided by a 25% annualized growth in the top line and an
impressive 73% annualized growth in the bottom-line. The performance has also
been helped by a growing p/e ratio that improved from 13 to 17. Being cash
rich, the company has always adopted a generous dividend pay-out stance with
the pay-out ratio averaging close to 75% of profits. The average dividend yield
during the last five years stands at 5%.
Aarti Drugs,
is a Alchemie group company that is into pharmaceuticals. It enjoys an
annualized
price appreciation of 43% and an average dividend yield of 5%. The
company’s top line (19%) and bottom-line (22%) improved at a healthy clip
leading to higher profitability. The p/e ratio has been stagnant at 4 over the
years. The company adopts a conservative pay-out policy.
Concluding Theme:
The list given here is only partial and it
is possible to successfully isolate companies that have shown impressive
capital gains as well as dividend yield. The running theme among such companies
is healthy top line and bottom-line growth, p/e rerating and generous dividend pay-out
ratios. However, they all belong mostly to small cap segment whose fortunes can
change overnight!
The author thanks Rajesh Dheenathayalan for
his assistance
[1] Price performance refers to annaulized performance in past 5 years
(2009-2013); Dividend Yield computed as average yield over the same time
period.
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