Is Standard Chartered PLC A Safe Dividend Investment?

Not all dividends are as safe as they seem. What about Standard Chartered PLC (LON: STAN)?

| 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.

Standard CharteredIt’s easy to see why investors head for Asia-focused banking company Standard Chartered (LSE: STAN) when they are hunting for an income stream. After all, at today’s share price of 1202p, the forward dividend yield is running at about 4.5% for 2015 and City analysts expect underlying earnings to cover the payout around 2.3 times that year.

However, a peek at the four-year share-price chart reveals a slipping share price and I think that’s what we should expect from out-and-out cyclical companies like Standard Chartered mid-macro-economic cycle.

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 it follows that a company paying a dividend is showing that its cash flow is sound, right? 

Wrong. Companies seem to pay dividends for all sorts of reasons, even if they don’t have enough cash coming in. When we look at Standard Chartered’s recent trading we see a record of rising profits, with cash flow that has bounced back from its post-financial crisis lows. That seems a better performance on cash flow than some of the firm’s London-listed banking peers:

  2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Operating profit ($m) 5,130 6,080 6,701 8,061 8,584
Net cash from operations ($m) (4,754) (16,635) 18,370 17,863 9,305

Standard Chartered is big in emerging markets and derives about 82% of its operating profit from Asia and 10% from Africa. Recent well-reported jitters in up-and-coming regions of the world can’t be helping the share price but, as with all cyclical companies, there’s probably a valuation-compression dynamic fighting against total investor returns as the macro-economic cycle rolls out.

Dividend growth

 Standard Chartered’s progress on earnings and cash flow reflects in the record of rising dividends:

  2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Dividends per share (cents) 66 70 76 84 86

So, we have a return from dividend income battling it out with attrition from a slipping share price to nullify total returns. That’s the problem with investing in cyclical companies; they are tricky, particularly when we miss the early stage of a cyclical up leg where the cyclical firms tend to provide the biggest shareholder gains.

Over the top of all of that with Standard Chartered, we have the odour of potential strong growth thanks to the firm’s strong position in fast-growing regions.

What now?

The cyclicality of the finance sector keeps me out of most banking shares, even Standard Chartered. They are just too difficult to time.  

Kevin Godbold has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Standard Chartered.

More on Investing Articles

Young female business analyst looking at a graph chart while working from home
Investing Articles

Here’s what happened to £1,000 invested in the past 2 stock market crashes

History may not repeat itself, but our writer reckons there are lessons to be learned from what recent stock market…

Read more »

Young Caucasian woman at the street withdrawing money at the ATM
Investing Articles

Here’s how the HSBC share price reached an all-time high… and what might be next

HSBC’s record share price reflects a strong rebound in profits and investor confidence, but future gains may be bumpier from…

Read more »

UK coloured flags waving above large crowd on a stadium sport match.
Investing Articles

Investors tempted by beaten-down Diageo shares should mark 6 May on their calendars now

Diageo is a top British blue-chip but its shares have come under fire in recent years. Harvey Jones hopes investors…

Read more »

Close up of manual worker's equipment at construction site without people.
Investing Articles

Are Taylor Wimpey shares just too cheap to ignore?

Times have been tough for holders of Taylor Wimpey shares. But Paul Summers wonders whether a lot of bad news…

Read more »

This way, That way, The other way - pointing in different directions
Investing Articles

Here’s how to target a £50 monthly passive income in a Stocks and Shares ISA

How easy or hard is it to start building a £50 monthly passive income in a Stocks and Shares ISA?…

Read more »

Edinburgh Cityscape with fireworks over The Castle and Balmoral Clock Tower
Investing Articles

£7,500 invested in Scottish Mortgage shares 3 years ago is now worth…

Scottish Mortgage shares have the wind in their sails and have delivered excellent returns since 2023. Is this FTSE 100…

Read more »

Belfast City Sunset with colorful twilight over Lagan Weir Pedestrian and Cycle Bridge spanning over the Lagan River in downtown Belfast
Investing Articles

Up 1,164%! Here’s how the Rolls-Royce share price might keep surging

The Rolls-Royce share price has been flying of late. But here's one reason why the next few years could see…

Read more »

Midnight is celebrated along the River Thames in London with a spectacular and colourful firework display.
Investing Articles

Down 90% and 93%! Are Ocado Group and Aston Martin shares set for a mind-blowing recovery?

Aston Martin shares have been a complete disaster and Ocado has done just as badly. But are these FTSE 250…

Read more »