Eaton Vance Corp: Get Paid To Invest In A Long Tradition Of Investing Excellence

 | Apr 27, 2012 05:36AM ET

Historically, the best time to invest in Eaton Vance Corp (EV) is when its price is aligned with its earnings justified valuation as it is now. The market has traditionally applied a premium valuation to Eaton Vance where the entry dividend yield has usually been below 2%. However, at today’s valuation, new investors have the opportunity to invest with the yield close to 3%. Consequently, Eaton Vance appears to offer attractive capital appreciation and an above-average and potentially growing dividend.
 
This article looks at Eaton Vance Corp, a Dividend Champion, through the lens of the F.A.S.T. Graphs™ Fundamentals Analyzer Software Tool.  Since a picture is worth a thousand words, the reader will be provided the “essential fundamentals at a glance” expressed vividly in pictures.   In order to provide you the opportunity to research this company deeper and faster we are providing a link to a live, fully functioning earnings and price correlated set of graphs F.A.S.T. Graphs™ clearly illustrates the importance of earnings to both price movement and dividend income. The earnings growth rate line or True Worth ™ line (orange line with white triangles) is correlated with the historical stock price line. On graph after graph the lines will move in tandem. If the stock price strays away from the earnings line (over or under), inevitably it will come back to earnings.
 
Since dividends are paid out of earnings, and therefore represent additional return on top of what the market capitalizes earnings at, they are depicted by the light blue shaded area and stacked on top of the earnings line. Therefore, a quick visual of these two important components is simultaneously revealed:
 
1.   The additional return that dividend paying stocks provide.
2.   The percentage of earnings paid to shareholders as dividends (payout ratio).
 
The value in this article is through carefully analyzing the earnings and price correlated fundamentally based graphs. Notice that one glance tells you how well the company has performed on an operating basis historically and how the market valued that historical performance. Therefore, the reader is free to discover whether or not current valuations make sense based on historical norms coupled with fundamental values. Instead of opinion, this article is designed to produce facts that can be analyzed to the readers investing benefit.