Where Next For Barclays' Dividend?

Published in Company Comment on 17 December 2012

Can Barclays (LSE: BARC) afford its dividend payments, or is a dividend cut likely?

Many investors focus on earnings per share when judging a company's performance. However, earnings can be manipulated and adjusted in all sorts of ways, meaning they don't tell you a lot about how much spare cash a company has generated. Similarly, since dividend cover is calculated using earnings, a good level of dividend cover doesn't necessarily mean the payout is actually being funded from a company's profits.

A company's cash flow can tell you a lot about a firm's financial health. Is the company burning up its cash reserves on interest payments and operating expenses, or does it generate spare cash that can fund dividends or be retained for future investment? If a dividend isn't funded by cash flow, then there is a greater chance the payout will become unaffordable and be cut, which is bad news for shareholders like you and me.

In this series, I'm going to take a look at the cash flow statements of some of the biggest names in the FTSE 100 (UKX), to see whether their dividends are being funded in a sustainable way, from genuine spare cash. Today, I'm looking at Barclays (LSE: BARC) (NYSE: BCS.US).

Does Barclays have enough cash?

As private investors, we want to back businesses that are able to pay their dividends out of free cash flow each year. I define free cash flow as the cash that's left over after capital expenditure, interest payments and tax deductions. With that in mind, let's look at Barclays' cash flow from the last five years:

Year20072008200920102011
Free cash flow (£m)-1,20824,53053,73213,05927,167
Dividend payments (£m)2,1512,6976331,3071,387
Free cash flow/dividend*-0.69.184.910.019.6

*A value of >1 means the dividend was covered by free cash flow

Source: Barclays annual reports

The figures above appear to suggest that Barclays has been generating massive amounts of free cash flow. However, all is not quite as it seems, and much of this cash has been spoken for. Like RBS and Lloyds, Barclays has been working hard since 2008 to improve its ability to deal with future financial shocks and bad debt. This ability is measured using a bank's core tier one capital and its core tier one ratio. Core tier one capital is essentially the amount of cash a bank has, while the core tier one ratio compares the amount of core tier one capital to the bank's risk-weighted assets (its loan book). By increasing core tier one capital and reducing its loan book, Barclays has been able to improve its core tier one ratio to its current value of 11%.

However, achieving this result has meant hoarding cash ferociously -- something all of the major UK banks have been doing. This has attracted criticism from politicians and the public, who bemoan the banks' reluctance to lend, but the effect it has had on Barclays' finances is clear. Barclays' balance of cash and cash equivalents has risen from a mere £20bn at the end of 2005 to a mighty £149bn at the end of 2011. Set against this, it's easy to see why the major banks' share prices have not been affected by Libor, PPI and other scandals -- the amounts of money involved in paying the fines are simply too small to worry about. The £1bn set aside by Barclays to handle PPI claims is a substantial amount of money -- but it is hardly likely to trouble a bank that generated £27bn of free cash flow in 2011.

Is Barclays' dividend safe?

In 2008, Barclays avoided the humiliation of a government bailout by securing a major injection of funds from Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, Qatar Holdings. That deal also enabled Barclays to avoid the EU ban on paying dividends -- recipients of state aid such as RBS and Lloyds were banned from making shareholder payouts until April 2012. The end result is that Barclays -- rightly or wrongly -- appeared to have survived the credit crunch more successfully than its UK-focused peers, and was never forced to cancel its dividend.

Of course, it wasn't all plain sailing. Barclays paid out 34p per share in 2007. In 2008, this was slashed to 11.5p, and in 2009 the bank's dividend payout hit a record low of 2.5p per share. Things have improved since then and the dividend was back up to 6p in 2011. This year's total payout is expected to be 6.4p, a 6.3% increase. So what are the dividend prospects for Barclays' long-suffering shareholders?

If you've held Barclays' shares since before the financial crisis, your yield on cost will be pretty low, a situation that is likely to persist for some time. However, I think that Barclays' dividend is pretty safe at its current levels and is likely to continue to grow over the next two or three years.

Top income tips

One man who really understands how to assess the quality of a company's dividends is legendary City fund manager Neil Woodford, whose High Income fund grew by 342% over the fifteen years to October 2012, during which time the FTSE All-Share index managed a gain of only 125%.

Mr. Woodford selects stocks that he believes are undervalued and likely to deliver strong dividend growth. His record is one of the best in the City (he sold his banking shares before the crash) and at the end of October 2012, he had £21 billion of private investors' funds under management -- more than any other City fund manager.

You can learn about eight of Neil Woodford's largest holdings and how he generates such fantastic returns in this exclusive Motley Fool report. It's completely free, but is available for a limited time only. I strongly suggest you click here and download the report today to avoid missing out.

> Roland does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

BigJC1 17 Dec 2012 , 11:50am

The enormous cash generation and underlying core profits (ie before fines, PPI, etc) has largely gone unnoticed by the markets until recently. Whilst the doom mongers have consistently forecast the end of the bank system and capitalism with a quarter of a century in the doldrums the banks have just got on with rebuilding profits using cheap government money, the implicit government back guarantee and the ability to charge premiums at a time of changing risk profiles.

The great news is that much of this is building long term profit streams which, when the noise disappears out of the profit stream, will see substantial profits and dividends based on solid banking principles.

bringhurst 18 Dec 2012 , 12:08pm

How much does Neil Woodford pay for the adverts at the bottom of these articles? I see he does a similar thing at Hargreaves Lansdowne (frequent plugs for his funds).

I rarely visit fool.co.uk nowadays, but it really has gone downhill and approaches a link farm nowadays - as on lovemoney.com it just feels like each article is constructed mainly to provide content which will get indexed by google and funnel prospects into a sales pipeline. Which is sad as the site used to have a great community and a lot of good advice.

goodlifer 18 Dec 2012 , 11:57pm

If Mr Woodford is so bright, why does he pay TMF for making such a lousy job of selling him?

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