Where Next For Aviva's Dividend?

Published in Company Comment on 10 January 2013

Can Aviva plc (LON: AV.) 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 high-yielding insurance giant Aviva (LSE: AV) (NYSE: AV.US).

Aviva's 7% Yield

Like its insurance peers RSA Insurance and Resolution, Aviva offers a remarkably high yield -- at today's prices, Aviva shares yield a juicy 7%, and while the final dividend for 2012 has yet to be confirmed, last year's interim dividend was held and brokers' forecasts are for the final dividend to also remain unchanged. The financial and eurozone crises have left the general insurance sector firmly out of favour and Aviva has come under particular suspicion due to its large exposure to eurozone sovereign debt -- the bonds issued by cash-strapped countries such as Spain.

Many people, including me, think that this risk is overdone and have purchased Aviva for both its income and value qualities. However, such a high yield inevitably implies a certain amount of risk and raises two questions; is Aviva's underlying business sound, and will it be forced to cut its dividend? In this article, I'm going to look at Aviva's dividend, and ask whether it is properly supported by the company's cash flow.

Does Aviva 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 Aviva's cash flow from the last five years:

Year20072008200920102011
Free cash flow (£m)2,6286,1631,9841,460-972
Dividend payments (£m)517749493489448
Free cash flow/dividend*5.18.24.03.0-2.2

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

Source: Aviva annual reports

Aviva's free cash flow figures suggest that its dividends have been comfortably affordable over the last five years -- with the exception of 2011, when dire market conditions meant that it generated very little cash. The firm hasn't published its 2012 results yet, but to get some clues as to the likely outcome, I took a look at Aviva's interim results for 2012, covering the six months to 30 June 2012.

Aviva's interim results suggest that 2012 was a good period in terms of cash flow. During the first half of the year, Aviva generated £3,221m of free cash flow, using my measure -- an impressive figure that was helped by the company's ongoing program of disposals and by a fall in interest payments, which may have been due to the company refinancing some of its debt at more favourable rates.

Is Aviva's dividend safe?

Although 2011 was a difficult year, 2012 looks likely to have been a return to previous form for Aviva, with ample free cash flow to fund shareholders' dividends. Looking ahead, some risks remain. Aviva is mid-way through a program of changes intended to focus the business on its most profitable divisions and remove its least profitable. In time, this strategy should make Aviva more robust, less indebted and more profitable -- but it's too early to say how successful it will be, or how long it will take.

I believe that Aviva's underlying business is solid and that this strategy should work, not least because the company has an able management team with previous experience of transforming large insurance operations. Institutional investors seem confident, too -- Aviva's share price has risen by 30% over the last six months, compared to an 8% gain for the FTSE 100.

Overall, I think that Aviva's dividend looks fairly safe, but is likely to be held at its current level for at least another year.

Top income tips

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> Roland own shares in Aviva but does not own shares in any other companies mentioned in this article.

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Comments

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QuantumDealer 10 Jan 2013 , 10:21am

"Overall, I think that Aviva's dividend looks fairly safe", fairly safe is not what you want when it comes to a dividend paying stock though.

timeandpatience 10 Jan 2013 , 1:18pm

If free cash flow is a reliable tool for predicting Aviva's future dividend policy, why was the dividend cut by over 25% in 2009 (when the dividend was covered four times over by free cash flow)?

rmillaree 11 Jan 2013 , 7:58am

I am very dubious about the cash flow figures quoted as they are wildly different from the EPS figures that the company has returned over the same period and its EPS that is needed to cover the divi.

The 2008 figure in particular is so ridiculous that an explanation is needed

The report says
Cash and cash equivalents in long-term business operations of £20,141 million (2007: £11,132 million) are primarily
held for the benefit of policyholders and so are generally not available for use by the Group.

Is it not likely cash flow quoted includes investment inflows by customers and therefore has nil relation to the ability of the company to pay the divi?

If this is he case perhaps this article should be amended as appropriate or removed completely.

DIYIncome 11 Jan 2013 , 8:33am

Roland,

Thanks for raising the issues. Clearly AV is under pressure. Company execs act in their own self-interest. Given that the share price is already down, they will probably be a bit careful about actually cutting the divi although they may well use any spare cash for buy-backs rather than increasing the divi.

An alternative for us income investors is the pref, AV.A, with a similar yield and which is very unlikely to be cut.

http://www.the-diy-income-investor.com/2012/04/portfolio-buy-aviva-8-34-cum-irrd-pref.html

atilliator 14 Jan 2013 , 1:30pm

There is a rumour going around that AV. are going to slash the dividend by 16 percent. I think this is just a bit of tree shaking. It is unlikely that the dividend will be cut, since AV. shareholders include pension funds and other institutions. If the management cut the dividend, the share price is likely to tumble.

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