Is Barclays PLC A Safe Dividend Investment?

Not all dividends are as safe as they seem. What about Barclays PLC (LON: BARC)?

| 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.

It’s easy to see why investors head for banking and financial services company Barclays (LSE: BARC) (NYSE: BCS.US) when they are hunting for an income stream. After all, at today’s share price of 210p, the forward dividend yield is running at about 5.2% for 2015 and City analysts expect underlying earnings to cover the payout around 2.7 times that year.

Yet many will be wary of the financial sector after the events of recent years and that’s a good thing. Indeed, if you look at Barclays’ share-price chart for the last four years, you’ll see the trend is down.  That situation works against a successful dividend investment in my book.

What’s the point in collecting a growing stream of dividends if capital loss is working against your total investment return?

How is that dividend paid?

The thing to remember about dividends is the only thing that pays them is cash. If a company doesn’t have the cash, it can’t pay the dividend, so a company paying a dividend is showing that its cash flow cuts the mustard, right? 

Wrong. Companies seem to pay dividends for all sorts of reasons, even if they don’t have enough cash coming in, and one thing that seems to challenge Barclays is its performance around cash:

Year to December 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Cash at bank (£m) 81,483 97,630 106,894 86,191 45,687
Net cash from operations (£m) 41,844 18,686 29,079 (13,823) (25,174)
Net cash from investing (£m) 11,888 (5,627) (1,912) (7,097) (22,645)
Net increase/decrease in cash (£m) 49,831 17,060 18,273 (27,873) (41,711)

I’m seeing a downwards trend on every cash measure, which seems to be a by-product of the firm’s efforts to turn its fortunes around. Barclays is engaged in a plan to de-risk its business for reputation and conduct, after a string of scandals, and to de-leverage from it teetering position of high financial gearing.

Reform doesn’t come cheap. It sucks out cash, and investors won’t forget last year’s £5.8 billion dilutive rights issue either. However, regulators won’t let Barclays carry on as before, and lower leverage implies scaled-back operations and thus lower profits.

Yet, the dividend is up

Despite the ructions in its business, Barclays keeps growing its dividend payment:

  2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Dividend per share 2.31p 5.09p 5.56p 6.5p 6.5p

Forward predictions indicate decent dividend growth for 2014 and 2015 too.

Yet all banking companies bolt directly to the cyclicality of the financial industry. We can see that cyclicality playing out now. As the macro-economic cycle unfolds Barclays’ profits seem to be on the rise, but the share price is slipping.

Playing the cyclicals is a difficult game. Viewing the cyclicals as a straightforward buy-and-hold-in-a-diversified-income-portfolio investment is a losers game. The losing might not arrive immediately, but in the fullness of time…

Kevin Godbold has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the shares mentioned.

More on Investing Articles

The Milky Way at night, over Porthgwarra beach in Cornwall
Investing Articles

£15,000 invested in red-hot Scottish Mortgage shares 1 month ago is now worth…

Scottish Mortgage shares are having a moment, and Harvey Jones says it's mostly down to its exposure to Elon Musk's…

Read more »

UK financial background: share prices and stock graph overlaid on an image of the Union Jack
Investing Articles

Are IAG shares the ultimate FTSE 100 volatility play? 

IAG shares ended last week on a high, and has held up pretty well during the Middle East crisis. But…

Read more »

Abstract 3d arrows with rocket
Investing Articles

Will the stock market go off like a rocket on Monday?

Middle East turmoil is yet to trigger a full-blown stock market crash. Harvey Jones says the recent recovery could have…

Read more »

Young mixed-race woman jumping for joy in a park with confetti falling around her
Investing Articles

Here’s what £15,000 invested in Taylor Wimpey shares on Thursday is worth today…

Investors holding Taylor Wimpey shares finally had something to celebrate on Friday as the beaten-down FTSE 250 housebuilder rallied. What…

Read more »

Three generation family are playing football together in a field. There are two boys, their father and their grandfather.
Investing Articles

How much would it take to turn an ISA into a £1,000-a-month passive income machine?

Focusing on dividend shares in well-known, big companies, what would it take for someone to target a four-figure monthly passive…

Read more »

Female Tesco employee holding produce crate
Investing Articles

2 reasons a stock market crash could be a good thing!

Our writer does not know when the next stock market crash might arrive. But he hopes that, whenever it does,…

Read more »

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

How much do I need in a Stocks and Shares ISA to target a £13,400 annual income?

£13,400 is the minimum required income for retirement. But how big does a Stocks and Shares ISA need to be…

Read more »

Woman riding her old fashioned bicycle along the Beach Esplanade at Aberdeen, Scotland.
Investing Articles

Want to aim for £31,353 more than the State Pension? A SIPP could be the answer

The State Pension offers a safety net, but here’s why you could consider a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) for a…

Read more »