How Strong Are British American Tobacco plc’s Dividends?

British American Tobacco plc (LON: BATS) is offering steady 4% yields.

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

If you want a winning formula for a great dividend-paying business, selling something consumable to a very large worldwide customer base with little in the way of research and development costs is a good way to start.

Then make the product something that people are literally addicted to, and you surely can’t go wrong.

british american tobacco / imperial tobaccoIn a nutshell

That’s essentially British American Tobacco (LSE: BATS) (NYSE: BTI.US), and it’s easy to see why investors are prepared to pay good prices for the shares in order to get a reliable income.

For 2013, the company paid a dividend of 142.4p per share, which represented a yield of 4.4% on the year-end share price, and that was covered 1.5 times by earnings.

That’s a pretty good yield anyway, ahead of the FTSE 100‘s (FTSEINDICES: ^FTSE) average of around 3%, but taking into account its reliability cranks up its attractiveness a notch. But what valuation did the markets put on it? Well, the shares ended the year on a P/E of 15, which is only slightly ahead of the FTSE’s long-term average of 14, so not much premium at all.

Shares have risen

For this year we have a modest 2.5% rise in the dividend forecast, to 146p per share — not big, but in line with inflation. Cover should stay close to 1.5 times.

The share price has risen since December 2013 to 3,588p, giving us a forward P/E of 17 and dropping the potential dividend yield to 4.1%.

Some might see that as a bit expensive now, but it still looks reasonable to me because of the very low chances of the dividend being cut any time soon.

Long term?

The longer-term risk, of course, is that the popularity of smoking is waning. But despite telling us that “difficult trading conditions persist in some parts of the world” in its 213 results released in February, British American did go on to say that its strategy “continues to deliver robust profit and dividend growth“.

And at first-quarter time this year, chief executive Nicandro Durante said he was “confident of delivering consistent growth in earnings […], which we will recognise with an increase in the dividend“.

Overall volume sales are slowly falling, but the continuing shift to high-margin brands suggests that rumours of the death of the industry are premature.

The cash looks safe

And although surely one day the world will kick the tobacco habit, it’s not going to be any time soon — and British American Tobacco’s dividends do not look under any threat in the foreseeable future.

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the shares mentioned.

More on Investing Articles

A young Asian woman holding up her index finger
Investing Articles

Don’t miss this once-in-a-decade opportunity to profit from the stock market’s AI hype

Our writer considers a rare value opportunity that could emerge if AI hype leads to a siginficant stock market correction.…

Read more »

A senior man using hiking poles, on a hike on a coastal path along the coastline of Cornwall.
Investing Articles

£10,000 invested in easyJet shares on 1 April is now worth…

It's been a strange month for easyJet shares. But what exactly would have happened to a sum invested in the…

Read more »

Portrait of elderly man wearing white denim shirt and glasses looking up with hand on chin. Thoughtful senior entrepreneur, studio shot against grey background.
Investing Articles

Down 29%, should I buy Palantir for my Stocks and Shares ISA?

Palantir Technologies has lost over a quarter of its value in the past few months. Does this make it a…

Read more »

Man putting his card into an ATM machine while his son sits in a stroller beside him.
Investing Articles

Selling for £1, are Lloyds shares still a bargain?

Lloyds shares sold for pennies for many years -- but now cost a pound. Our writer sees some strengths in…

Read more »

Close-up image depicting a woman in her 70s taking British bank notes from her colourful leather wallet.
Investing Articles

How much could spending just £5 a day on UK shares earn in passive income?

Sticking to UK shares in well-known companies, our writer shows how £5 a day could be used to target over…

Read more »

Dominos delivery man on skateboard holding pizza boxes
Investing Articles

Think you’re too young for a SIPP? Think again!

Is a SIPP something best left to later in working life? Not at all, according to this writer -- and…

Read more »

Close-up of a woman holding modern polymer ten, twenty and fifty pound notes.
Investing Articles

These 5 FTSE 100 shares all offer dividend yields well above average!

Christopher Ruane gives the lowdown on a handful of FTSE 100 shares, all yielding considerably higher than the index, that…

Read more »

Investing Articles

How to turn a Stocks and Shares ISA into £10k of annual passive income

Mark Hartley outlines a simple method of achieving a stable passive income stream from a Stocks and Shares ISA without…

Read more »