5 Bargain-Basement Buys For Up To 500% Payout Growth

 | Jul 01, 2018 02:22AM ET

If you buy a stock that eventually increases its dividend by 100% in the coming years, you’re going to double your money or better as that happens. Find a payout with 200%, 300% or even 500% upside? Then we have a secure way to total returns up to 500%.

(We’ll discuss five generous payers in a minute, with price upside up to 500%.)

Why does dividend growth matter so much more than earnings, sales or even cash flow growth? Well, we income investors buy a stock for one of three reasons:

  • A meaningful current yield
  • The potential for a higher yield-on-cost over time, and/or
  • Price gains.

When these factors combine, they can create 100% price upside with a safe dividend payers. Share prices tend to rise in tandem with runaway dividends, as investors pay more for the now-higher yield.

Got a dividend grower that’s cheap? Even better. It means that management can put its payout hikes on steroids by repurchasing its own bargain shares. (Look, there’s a reason it’s called “financial engineering” – it works!)

Let’s discuss five fast growing payouts on already-cheap stocks. If I were the chief financial officer (CFO) of one of these firms, I would be salivating at how fast I’ll be able to double these share prices. All have triple-digit upside potential, and all their CFOs need to do is to continue growing their dividends and repurchase cheap shares when appropriate.

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)
Dividend Yield: 1.4%
5-Year Dividend Growth: 68%
Forward P/E: 13.8

Apple (AAPL) is actually the “slowest” dividend grower on this list, at a five-year compound annual rate of “just” under 11%.

Everyone knows Apple for its devices – the iPhone still drives a majority of Apple’s revenues, though its iPads, Macs and Macbooks still represent significant chunks of the top line. But the evolving story in Apple is its Services division. Services – which includes things such as iTunes, the App Stores and Apple Pay – jumped 31% year-over-year to $9.2 billion in revenues for the most recent quarter, putting the company well on its way to doubling Services sales between 2017 and 2020. Yes, that’s far less than the $38 billion generated by the iPhone, but it still was enough to represent 15% of Apple’s revenues for the quarter.

Just like most everything else Apple does, the Services division drives fat margins, which filters down into ample cash flow. Moreover, Apple is finally putting its $270 billion cash reserve to work thanks to a forced repatriation resulting from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. So while Apple is a dividend dynamo that’s growing its payout like a weed , investors also will enjoy the benefit of share buybacks. AAPL said this year it will repurchase a whopping $100 billion worth of shares, in addition to the record $23.5 billion it bought back during the March quarter.

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The AES Corporation (NYSE:AES)
Dividend Yield: 3.9%
5-Year Dividend Growth: 225%
Forward P/E: 9.9

Utility stocks are no stranger to lists of dividend growers. However, they tend to fraternize with other slow-income-growth plays thanks to their longevity but inability to raise rates more than a couple percent every year.

Which means AES Corporation (AES) isn’t your typical utility stock.

AES, which provides power in 15 countries, started as a consulting firm in 1981 and eventually expanded to electricity generation by building plants and acquiring companies such as Indianapolis Power & Light and Dayton Power & Light.

AES’ dividend has been marked by rapid expansion in its formative years. The quarterly payout began in 2012 at 4 cents per share; it stands at 13 cents today. Also noteworthy is a significantly lower forward P/E than the Utilities Select Sector SPDR (NYSE:XLU), which trades at 16.5 times earnings estimates.

Southwest Airlines Company (NYSE:LUV)
Dividend Yield: 1.0%
5-Year Dividend Growth: 300%
Forward P/E: 10.1

Southwest Airlines (LUV) is a breath of fresh air in an industry that at this point is identified by being hated by its clientele. The discount airline has long put an emphasis on pleasing both its workers and its customers, with the focus on the first contributing significantly to the latter. Southwest frequently sits near or at the top of J.D. Power satisfaction surveys, including winning the low-cost category for 2018 with the highest overall score among all airlines – even “traditional” carrier winner Alaska Air Group Inc (NYSE:ALK).

While reliable profitability growth can be a challenge for airlines thanks to factors such as oil-price swings, Southwest’s EPS have climbed – well, soared – every year since 2012. In fact, profits have exploded so much over the past five years that despite quadrupling the payout in that time, LUV sits at a laughably thin 8% dividend payout ratio right now.

Expect Southwest’s dividend growth to go essentially unchecked for years on end.

Southwest’s (LUV) Dividend Is Cleared for Takeoff