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HomeInvestmentsAugust 2013 Dividend Stock Watchlist Update

August 2013 Dividend Stock Watchlist Update

I am not sure why but in the last 18 months or so of updating my watchlist for everyone to see I never shared what I bought the month after…and no one ever called me out! So out of my July dividend watch list Update (July 15, 2013) I bought:

  • 15 Shares of Coke (KO) at $40.64 with commissions – $617.66 (July 15, 2013)
  • 11 Shares of HCP at $45.47 with commissions – $508.12 (July 24, 2013)

This (along with every other) update takes a snapshot of certain metrics. Ideally, I would revisit these metrics every single time I went to buy stocks, but my investment schedule is erratic based on unpredictable income and these updates take 90mins+ since everything is done by hand.

This snapshot was done the evening of August 19, 2013; my previous update was the July update linked above.

My Dividend Investment Portfolio Screening Criteria

  1. The company has paid increasing dividends for the past 20 years.
  2. The stock has to have a Price to Earning that is lower than their industry average. The Price to Earnings Ratio has to below 25 regardless of industry average.
  3. The Operating Margin has to be in line with the particular stock’s industry average. I want companies that are profitable as compared to their peers.
  4. Price to Book – Should be below 4, but if it isn’t it must be in line with industry average (or better).
  5. This monthly update the Dividend Yield should be above 2.5% (changes whenever I update the list depending how many stocks I have left after the first 3 steps).

You may notice that some of the stocks aren’t eliminated if they barely fail a metric test. This is because I don’t want to eliminate a stock that is within a range that eyeball since I am taking a snapshot.

Tweaks Which occurred in June of 2013

A few months ago I changed a few variables.  I have included them here just as a reminder to myself. 

  • For the past few years I have focused on the the Dividend Champion list (before that I used the the Dividend aristocrat list). The dividend champion list is updated monthly. Starting this month I have lowered the amount of years that a company has to have paid increasing dividends to 20 (from 25).
  • Last month I eliminated any stock with a P/E over 30, starting this month and going forward I am elimination any stock that has a P/E over 25 regardless of it beats the industry average.
  • In the past P/B was “reasonable” but as lot of commenters pointed out this eliminates companies with naturally higher P/B. I should have listened to my readers earlier! As such, I now use the industry average for all stocks with a P/B over 4.
  • Yield is now my last criteria (as opposed to P/B).

Definitions of Metrics Used for my Dividend Investment Portfolio

Since not everyone knows what the hell I am talking about above I have provided definitions (all quotes taken from Investopedia):

  • Dividend Champions are those dividend paying American companies that have increased their dividend for the past 25 years. Unlike the Dividend Aristocrat list they do not have to be part of the S&P500. I have included a part of the dividend contenders list.
  • P/E is Price is “a valuation ratio of a company’s current share price compared to its per-share Earnings.”
  • Operating margin is “a measurement of what proportion of a company’s revenue is left over after paying for variable costs of production such as wages, raw materials, etc. A healthy operating margin is required for a company to be able to pay for its fixed costs, such as interest on debt.”
  • Price to book is a ratio used to compare a stock’s market value to its book value. It is calculated by dividing the current closing price of the stock by the latest quarter’s book value per share.
  • Dividend Yield a “Financial ratio that shows how much a company pays out in dividends each year relative to its share price. In the absence of any capital gains, the dividend yield is the return on investment for a stock. Dividend yield is calculated by dividing Annual Dividends per Share by Price Per Share”

First Stock Screen: PE Ratio

The first Stocks I their eliminated were those whose Price to Earnings Ratios were out of line with their industry average. I also eliminate companies with PEs above 25 regardless of their industry average.

Second Stock Screen: Operating Margin

Next I eliminated those stocks whose operating margin was not better than its peers in the industry. I want the companies I invest in to be more profitable than their peers. This way unless there is a huge problem with the industry they’d be less likely to stop doing something (i.e. paying increasing dividends) that they have been doing for the past 20+ years

Third Stock Screen: Reasonable Price to Book or in line with their Industry

I was looking for those stocks whose price to book value is low as to further evidence that it is undervalued. In an effort to limit the unintended consequence of choosing stocks with a lot of tangible or financial assets on the books I have started comparing the P/B to the industry average.

Fourth Stock Screen: Yield

While I am not ‘chasing yields’ I am attempting to create a dividend portfolio, so the next elimination step was to remove any stocks with a dividend yield of less than 2.5%. As stated, this is a moving target depending on how many stocks I have left to choose from. Sometimes I go for 2% sometimes 4%.

Remaining Dividend Aristocrats that I hope are near their 52 week low

For the next month or two I will be looking at the following stocks hoping some come near their 52 week low:

Altria Group Inc. MO
Atmos Energy ATO
Bemis Company BMS
Black Hills Corp. BKH
Chevron Corp. CVX
Coca-Cola Company KO
Consolidated Edison ED
HCP Inc. HCP
Leggett & Platt Inc. LEG
McDonald’s Corp. MCD
MGE Energy Inc. MGEE
Northwest Natural Gas NWN
Procter & Gamble Co. PG
Questar Corp. STR
Sonoco Products Co. SON
Sysco Corp. SYY
Vectren Corp. VVC
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. WMT
Weyco Group Inc. WEYS
Meredith Corp. MDP

Have any history with these companies? Anything you’d like to share?

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3 COMMENTS

  1. Hi I like your general idea. I would suggest doing an analysis of what you think the fair value is of each of the stocks in your final screen to select the top 2-3 based on the margin of safety principle that Benjamin Graham taught to Warren Buffett. That way you can hopefully enjoy some capital appreciation along with your dividend. A stock I recommend is BGCP it’s got an 8% dividend but is more speculative. Cheers.

  2. Thank you for sharing all of this research. Just wondering, where do you get the source data for all of this?

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