Banco Santander Maintains Dividend To Yield 9.6%

Published in Company Comment on 31 January 2013

Banco Santander (LON: BNC) holds its payout for the third year running.

The shares of Banco Santander (LSE: BNC) (NYSE: SAN.US) dropped 20p, or 4%, to 533p during early London trade this morning after the market took a sceptical view of the bank's 2012 results and maintained dividend.

Santander, which claims to serve 102 million customers throughout Europe, South America, Mexico and the United States, today announced it would declare a €0.60 per share annual payout for the third year running.

The dividend, equivalent to 52p per share, provides a 9.6% yield for current buyers.

Santander's dividend announcement accompanied full-year results that boasted pre-provision profits climbing 2% to €23bn. However, the figures also revealed provisions for non-performing loans surging 28% to €13bn, and a further €4bn write-off relating to Spanish property values.

The charges caused overall earnings to plunge 59% to €0.23 per share and leave the dividend uncovered.

Emilio Botin, Santander's chairman, said: "Profits reached a turning point in 2012. In 2013, with the exceptional write-offs behind us, we should see a marked increase in earnings, based on the group's recurrent revenues and cost control".

If Santander's financial performance of 2010 were to be repeated during 2013 -- that is, with loan provisions of €10bn and no Spanish property write-offs -- then near-term earnings could rebound to €0.94, or 80p, per share.

Such a recovery would put the shares on a possible P/E of less than 7.

Santander's latest balance sheet carried net assets of €80bn, equivalent to roughly €7.87 or 677p per share. The shares thus trade on a price to book ratio of 0.79.

Of course, whether Santander's write-offs, its valuation plus the general outlook for the banking sector all combine to make the share a buy remains up to you.

Still, certainly Santander's near-10% income looks tempting and is greater than the 3.5% currently on offer from the FTSE 100. But the market rarely offers such generous yields without risk.

Indeed, if you already own Santander shares, you may wish to read this exclusive in-depth report about a lower-risk income opportunity among Europe's large-caps.

You see, the blue chip in question offers a 5.7% income, its shares might be worth 21% more than their recent price -- and it has just been declared "The Motley Fool's Top Income Stock For 2013"! Just click here to download the report -- it's free.

> Maynard does not own any share mentioned in this article.

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Comments

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drfuzz 31 Jan 2013 , 1:19pm

Santander is a strange share. It's often written off as being a Spanish share and hence being toxic. Yet Spain accounts for under 20% of income and pre-write down profit, while Latin America accounts for 50% nowadays. I consider it more like a Spanish HSBC albiet with serious problems in it's home market.

I hold with an average of 550p, though I sold a tranch yesterday pre results expecting some kind of disappointment today after the recent good run. As the article points out, if the worst is behind us the shares could be on a P/E of 7 this time next year, and that 9%+ yield is tempting, but there are two elephants in the room:
- EPS has not covered dividend the last two years
- there is real uncertainty about the future governance of the company given Emilio Botin is 78 and still there!
FT did an excellent article on BNC recently, and if you hold or are interested in buying BNC, it's well worth a read.

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/57d8d5be-65bf-11e2-a3db-00144feab49a.html#axzz2JCLBaFVW

drfuzz 31 Jan 2013 , 1:25pm

Oh and as a PS I forgot to mention: spanish withholding tax applies (19%) so yield is more like 7.5% if you are UK based; and given the lack of div cover, BNC is running a scrip dividend scheme (default unless you specify otherwise), about 80% of dividends are being taken as stock leading to a 2% or so stock dilution every quarter (though obviously no withholding tax on scrip dividends!)

mousecatcher007 31 Jan 2013 , 3:15pm

The wittholding tax is in fact now 21% (as of 1.1.12). Expect this to go in only one direction as the Spanish government desperately tries to plug its gaping budget deficit! Santander will assist a UK resident to reclaim 6% of the tax - but only if you use their sharedealing service:
http://www.santander.com/csgs/Satellite/CFWCSancomQP01/en_GB/Corporate/Shareholders/Shareholders-UK/Useful-Information/Spanish-Withholding-Tax-.html


vinchainsaw 01 Feb 2013 , 9:47am

Or you could simply use a CFD or spreadbet and take witholding tax and currency fluctuations out of the equation.

You dont even need to use leverage - just deposit the amount you want to invest and purchase a similar future/bet.

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