Are Dividends From NEXT plc (6%), Galliford Try plc (5.6%) And Petrofac Limited (4.8%) Too Good To Miss?

How reliable are NEXT plc (LON: NXT), Galliford Try plc (LON: GFRD) and Petrofac Limited (LON: PFC) dividends?

| 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.

Despite the tough competitive business it’s in, there are very few successful cash generators like NEXT (LSE: NXT) around. For the year ended January 2015, it paid out 150p in ordinary dividends plus 110p in special dividends, and returned extra cash though buying back its own shares to the tune of £138m.

For the year just ended in January 2016, analysts are expecting a total dividend return of 399p per share. At the first-half stage this year the firm announced a 53p interim ordinary dividend, and had revealed another 120p in special dividends. For much of the year buybacks were out as the shares have mainly been priced above the company’s limit. So the forecast is looking pretty good for the full year.

Since 2 December however, NEXT shares have fallen back by 16% to 6,600p, so the final quarter of the year might well see share buybacks accelerate. And it might have given us a nice buying opportunity too, dropping the P/E to 15.3 (and forecasts for the next two years would drop it further to under 14 by January 2018).

The drop also pushes up this year’s potential total dividend yield to 6%, with forecasts suggesting 6.2% and 6.5% for the following two years. Ace investor Neil Woodford counts NEXT among his high-yield investments, and it’s hard to argue with him.

Cash from houses…

Housebuilding and construction group Galliford Try (LSE: GFRD) has offered investors the best of both worlds in recent years — its share price has quadrupled over five years and it’s been paying out progressive dividends too.

The shares have actually fallen back by 20% since their 12-month peak in August 2015, to 1,443p, along with a slowdown in share price growth across the sector. But that’s lifted the forecast dividend yield for the year to June 2016 up to 5.6%, with analysts suggesting a whopping 6.8% in 2017.

At the halfway stage reported on 25 February, we heard of a 12% rise in revenue with earnings per share up 24%, and the interim dividend was lifted by 18% to 26p per share. That makes full-year forecasts look undemanding.

The shares are on a forward P/E of 11.4, dropping to 9.6 on 2017 forecasts, which sounds cheap to me for such attractive dividend yields.

…And from oil too

Shares in Petrofac (LSE: PFC) are down 38% since their May 2014 peak, to 890p. The falling oil price has been the culprit. Yet as a profitable oil services company, Petrofac is somewhat isolated from that. Its main customers in the Middle East are still pumping as much as they can, and they still need Petrofac’s services.

The shares are on lowly P/E multiples of around 10 based on forecasts for this year and next, and a decent rise in oil prices could see demand for services rising and earnings growing ahead of forecasts. For the year to December 2015, we’ve already heard of a 10% rise in revenue to $6.8bn.

The other tasty thing about Petrofac is its dividend, which is forecast to yield 4.8% this year and 5.1% next, and it would be a little over twice covered by forecast earnings each year. So we have a potential and relatively safe play on a recovering oil price, coupled with strong and well-covered dividends. How could you not like that?

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares of and has recommended Petrofac. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Two white male workmen working on site at an oil rig
Investing Articles

Up 13% in just 1 month, could Chevron stock have further to run?

Chevron stock has moved up in the past month -- and over the past few years. It also has an…

Read more »

Night Takeoff Of The American Space Shuttle
Investing Articles

Up 23%! What on earth’s going on with the BAE Systems share price?

Despite it only being mid-January, the BAE Systems share price has proven this writer wrong so far in 2026. Why…

Read more »

Two employees sat at desk welcoming customer to a Tesla car showroom
Investing Articles

Here’s what would have to happen for me to buy Tesla stock

Our writer likes the Tesla business but is not yet ready to buy its stock. What would have to happen…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Is 2026 a once-in-a-decade chance to generate passive income AND growth?

Building a passive income with stocks that generate dividends and growth can be rare, but Ken Hall wonders if 2026…

Read more »

Investing Articles

A once-in-a-decade chance to grab this brilliant 8%-yielding dividend share?

Harvey Jones says this FTSE 100 dividend share is at similar levels to a decade ago, and now could be…

Read more »

Close-up of a woman holding modern polymer ten, twenty and fifty pound notes.
Investing Articles

How much passive income could a £20,000 Stocks and Shares ISA earn over 20 years?

How big a money spinner can a Stocks and Shares ISA be when it comes to passive income? Christopher Ruane…

Read more »

Young woman working at modern office. Technical price graph and indicator, red and green candlestick chart and stock trading computer screen background.
Investing Articles

Down 58%, this FTSE 250 stock has a 6.4% dividend yield!

After a brutal 12 months, this FTSE 250 share still offers a dividend yield well above the index. Can it…

Read more »

Night Takeoff Of The American Space Shuttle
Investing Articles

Prediction: 2 FTSE 100 losers I think could explode in 2026!

These FTSE 100 shares fell by 13% and 21% respectively in 2025. Can they rebound this year? Royston Wild explains…

Read more »