12/20 24/7 Wall St.

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Can AT&& and Verizon Keep Raising Dividends Indefinitely? (T, VZ)
December 19, 2009 at 11:25 am


AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) has done what we expected would occur at some point soon.  Despite some bad company public relations Friday over its network, the company raised its quarterly dividend.  The old $0.41 quarterly payout was raised by 2.6% to $0.42 per quarter.  With a share price of $27.32, this comes to a yield of just over 6.1% for its annualized dividend.  What we wanted to see, same as when we covered the same sort of dividend hike at Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ), is if AT&T and Verizon both have more room to raise their dividends in 2010 as well.

So is the AT&T dividend hike possible all over again in 2010?  For starters, this was actually the 26th consecutive year that A&T has juiced its common stock dividend higher according to the company.  That is a pretty solid track record and pretty good forecasting tool for those who follow patterns.  Presumably at the dawn of humanity, when the sun rose from the same direction after about 20 days in a row it probably became assumed that it would continue that way.

As far as the AT&T earnings coverage, this seems adequate for another hike in 2010 if AT&T meets its earnings targets.  Thomson Reuters has 2010 earnings targets at $2.24 EPS, up from $2.12 EPS for 2009.  This new higher dividend of $0.42 comes to about $1.68 per share paid out of that earnings cash flow.  If AT&T were to boost its dividend again by a penny, then at a $1.72 payout per year it still has plenty of dividend coverage considering that AT&T probably doesn’t billions and billion to grow at this point.

As far as Verizon is concerned, its dividend hike in recent months to $0.475 per quarter comes to a payout of $1.90 annually.  Its 2010 earnings estimate from Thomson Reuters was listed as $2.64 EPS on the day it was announced.  Today that estimate for 2010 is $2.50 EPS.  That isn’t   The new dividend rate was based on a $30.10 share price at the time, giving it a 6.3% yield at the time.  Based on a $32.80 price today, Verizon’s dividend yield for new share buyers is 5.8%.

The dividend coverage on AT&T is about 1.3-times and Verizon is currently about 1.3-times even after the gain and after the earnings estimates came down. In short, these are both in-line.

Everyone keeps thinking about telecom being at risk because the old copper wires into the homes and businesses are slowly going away.  That isn’t the only game they have anymore, even if these businesses are no longer high-growth operations of the past.  Dividend hikes of this sort do not sound extreme.  In fact, they are not extreme.  But this is continued evidence of how some companies can keep growing their dividends year in and year out.  Recession or not.

JON C. OGG

Posted in Dividend, Telecom Tagged: T, VZ
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Oil Prices May Spike Monday, Nigeria Pipeline Attacked (CVX)(RDA.A)
December 19, 2009 at 10:46 am

Nigerian rebels have probably attacked pipeline installations near facilties operating by Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDA.A). This could cause the price of crude to rise at the end of the holiday. AP reports that “The violence has cut Nigeria’s oil production by about a million barrels a day, allowing Angola to surge ahead as Africa’s top [...]

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Joining GM, Ford Will Make Early Debt Repayments
December 19, 2009 at 7:56 am


Light vehicles sales in the US do not seem to be improving much. The market for 2009 will probably produce about 10.5 million sales well down from over 16 million four years ago. Monthly comparisons from 2008 are still running negative for most car companies.

It is a surprise that GM has started paying the federal government back the loans it received early this year. It sent the US Treasury $1 billion on December 18 and another $192 million went to the Canadian government. GM management expects to be able to pay off its entire $6.7 billion obligation to the two governments by June.

Ford (NYSE:F) said it would also begin to pay bondholders early.

Ford borrowed $23 billion less than two years ago to prepare for a restructuring that included firing tens of thousands of workers and retooling its plants. CEO Alan Mulally mortgaged all the company’s assets to get the capital. Ford’s total debt rose to $27 billion. The firm says it has paid $10 billion of that back this year. Ford would like to pay back most of the balance by the end of 2011. The company expects to be profitable that year.

The wonder of the Ford and GM announcements is where the money is coming from. In GM’s case, its sales in  China are booming. Units shipped in China in November by GM were large than the US number. But, Ford does not have significant operations in the world’s most populous nation.

The answer to the question of where the cash flow is coming from to bring down debt may be in the massive cost cuts that each of The  Big Three made in 2008 and early 2009. The breakeven point against total sales for the car firms may now be so low that Detroit can make money on even the most modest revenue.

Detroit will never return to the sales levels of 2003 through 2005, but Ford, GM, and Chrysler are likely to survive. A lot of experts bet against that just a year ago.

Douglas A. McIntrye

Posted in Autos Tagged: F
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