Tag Archives: Last Increase January

How Hormel Keeps Serving Up Strong Dividends

By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool

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Investors have always been interested in stocks that pay dividends, but lately, low interest rates on bonds and other fixed-income investments have made solid dividend payers even more valuable. Among the most promising dividend stocks in the market is Hormel Foods , and one big reason is that it is one of the few exclusive companies to make the list of Dividend Aristocrats.

In order to become a member of this elite group, a company must have raised its dividend payouts to shareholders every single year for at least a quarter-century. Only a few dozen stocks manage to make the cut, and those that do tend to stay there for a long time.

Hormel is famous for Spam, but it offers a full line of meat and other food products, ranging from Chi-Chi’s salsa and tortillas to Dinty Moore beef stew. Like many consumer-oriented businesses, Hormel has built up a reliable customer base that gives it a dependable and predictable flow of cash that it can then funnel out to shareholders. Let’s take a closer look at Hormel to see whether it can sustain its long streak of rewarding dividend payouts to investors.

Dividend Stats on Hormel

 

 

Current Quarterly Dividend Per Share

$0.17

Current Yield

1.7%

Number of Consecutive Years With Dividend Increases

47 years

Payout Ratio

33%

Last Increase

January 2013

Source: Yahoo! Finance. Last increase refers to ex-dividend date.

What’s happening at Hormel?
Hormel has done a good job of handling the challenges it has faced recently. Despite pressures from high feed costs resulting from last summer’s drought, its most recent quarterly results included a 1% gain in net income on a 4% increase in revenue. Moreover, the company boosted its full-year guidance by $0.03 per share, citing improving margins in its pork segment and continued strong performance from its Grocery Products division. Even though grocery products represent a small piece of Hormel’s business, it’s becoming increasingly important, as the recent split of Kraft Foods has created more urgency among competitors like Hormel to defend their turf and seek ways to expand.

Along those lines, the biggest recent news from Hormel came at the beginning of the year, when it announced it would buy the Skippy peanut butter brand from Unilever for $700 million. Somewhat surprisingly, Skippy is a major player not just in the U.S. but in China as well, where it’s the No. 1 peanut butter brand. As a result, the deal helps bolster Hormel’s attempts to expand internationally, and investors have applauded it as the stock that has risen almost 30% in response.

But the key for Hormel remains pork, which still represents the bulk of its business. That industry has seen mixed results lately, as domestic pork consumption has been weak but exports have kept the business growing. Tyson Foods relies more on chicken than pork, but its pork

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Sysco Is a Smart Stock for Dividend Investors

By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool

SYY Dividend Chart

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Investors have always been interested in stocks that pay dividends, but lately, low interest rates on bonds and other fixed-income investments have made solid dividend payers even more valuable. Among the most promising dividend stocks in the market is Sysco , and one big reason is that it is one of the few exclusive companies to make the list of Dividend Aristocrats. In order to become a member of this elite group, a company must have raised its dividend payouts to shareholders every single year for at least a quarter-century. Only a few dozen stocks manage to make the cut, and those that do tend to stay there for a long time.

Sysco dominates its industry, providing food products and services to hundreds of thousands of institutional clients. With its extensive distribution network, Sysco uses economies of scale to its advantage, holding off competitors by offering timely and efficient service wherever it’s needed. Let’s take a closer look at Sysco to see whether it can sustain its long streak of rewarding dividend payouts to investors.

Dividend Stats on Sysco

Current Quarterly Dividend Per Share

$0.28

Current Yield

3.3%

Number of Consecutive Years With Dividend Increases

43 years

Payout Ratio

59%

Last Increase

January 2013

Source: Yahoo! Finance. Last increase refers to ex-dividend date.

Has Sysco fed investors well lately?
Sysco’s strong position within the industry has left it without serious competition domestically. Other food distribution businesses do exist, but they’ve generally had to retreat to serve smaller niches within the industry. For instance, Core-Mark has found a profitable business serving convenience stores, with their unique needs for a mix of quick-serve snacks and other food products for travelers as well as necessities like milk for local customers. United Natural Foods has turned to the organic market for its specialty, taking advantage of increasing desires from consumers for healthier foods. Yet as long as these companies stay safely in their corners of the industry, Sysco will have a stranglehold as the food-services leader.

Yet Sysco isn’t invulnerable to headwinds affecting the entire food industry. Food-price inflation has been more prevalent lately, and although Sysco has enough pricing power to make its customers bear much of those added costs, its customers may nevertheless lack the financial wherewithal to be able to pay up when prices rise. Especially in the restaurant business, weakness even among high-growth eateries Buffalo Wild Wings and Chipotle has shown just how pervasive economic troubles are throughout the industry.

Sysco Dividend data by YCharts.

One could argue that these headwinds have led Sysco to be more conservative in its dividend growth. With the company having stuck with penny-per-share increases in its dividend in each of the past four years, Sysco has been spending more on acquisitions in an effort to expand more aggressively. In particular, international markets have great potential …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance