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Posted by Craig Basinger on Sep 23rd, 2024

Return of the Dividends

Summary: After a few years of really lagging the broader market, dividends have enjoyed a strong catch-up trade since the end of June. Lower bond yields appear to be the primary driver, helped by cooling inflation and slowing economic activity. Now, with dividends somewhat overbought in the short term, where do we go from here?

As of June 30th of this year, the halfway point, the TSX was up about +6%. Meanwhile, dividend stocks, as measured by the DJ Canadian Dividend Select index, were marginally better than flat (+0.9%). Even worse, dividend stocks were actually flat over a 2 ½ long period, measuring back to the start of 2022. As the TSX rose +12%. There were a number of reasons dividend stocks were in the dumps or lagging the broader market for so long, with the biggest being bond yields.

As bond yields moved higher, there were simply many choices for yield that didn’t exist in previous years. Cash was paid decently, and bonds from governments with high yields offered yields not seen in many years. Preferred shares were up there, too. Higher bond yields created many attractive yielding options across many asset classes. All of a sudden, those dividend stocks had some serious competition.

So, the prices of dividend stocks ground lower due to increased competition, and as a result, the dividend yield kept climbing higher. Pipelines touched a yield of 8%, banks 5.5%, utilities over 5% earlier this year, and telcos reached 7.2% a couple of months ago.

But then bond yields started to fall on the back of slowing economic activity and confidence that the pace of overnight rate cuts would accelerate. And dividend stocks started to fly. Since the end of June, banks have gained 16%, pipes have gained 14%, Telcos have gained 11%, and Utilities have gained 13%. In fact, gyrations in bond yields are driving both the relative and absolute performance of dividend stocks of late.

Dividends playing catch-up as bond yields fall

Of course, this now begs the question: Was it too far, too fast? There is no denying that many dividend stocks are in overbought territory on a technical basis. We looked at 14-day relative strength across the constituents of the DJ Select Dividend index, and the average today is 64. That is at or near the highest level over the past 25 years, so certainly a bit cautionary.

But after so many years of lagging, it certainly could have a longer run, right? Let’s talk valuations. Even after this partial catchup run, the Dividend index is trading at 11.3x forward estimated earnings. That is close to the long-term average of 11.5x, certainly not overvalued. Plus, the spread to the broader market is currently 3.8, which is still pretty wide.

Even after this recent run, dividends are far from expensive

The BIG question is, where do bond yields go from here? Everyone knows that central bank overnight rates are coming down, including the market. Still, for dividend stocks, bond yields are a bit further out and have a bigger impact on prices. So, 5-year Canada yields rose to about 4.3% in late 2023 and have since decreased to 2.75%. That is down 150bps, 90bps, which occurred since the end of June when dividend stocks started their catch-up run. There is no denying the economic data has been weak in Canada during this time, and CPI inflation has been low. This has all helped.

We are not convinced bond yields will go much lower. This lever to help dividend stocks may be near the end of its positive price influence. Inflation, too. There was lots of celebration around the year-over-year number coming down, but it just rolled off back-to-back 0.6% from last summer. The headline was going to come down unless we matched those huge inflation months. But now, it is all small numbers falling off, so for the headline to come down, we would need actual disinflation.

If the Canadian recession risk continues to rise, it will certainly put more downward pressure on bond yields. However, this is not a linear relationship between bond yields and dividend stocks, it is more quadratic. The further down bond yields move, the more the positive yield competition factor fades and the higher the recession risk. The more bond proxy utilities, staples, and pipes may still do well, but others like banks, telcos and real estate will not. Still, it's pretty early to get recession excited. Yes, the data is softer, but not many recession alarm bells are ringing just yet.

Final Thoughts

The dividend factor has been in the dumps for the past few years, and this recent catch-up is encouraging. It's clearly not early innings, but it's likely not late in the game, either. Valuations are still a bit favourable, and bond yields could tick a bit lower.

But don’t forget why so many Canadians have a decent tilt towards the dividend factor: 1) The dividend yield is attractive, more so these days, 2) some decent tax treatment helps, 3) they are defensive, which does have them lag in big up markets but retain value better in downswings, 4) dividends grow over time, historically faster than inflation, providing valuable portfolio purchasing power protection.

We are probably missing some points, but generally, dividends are cool again.

 — Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L. P., title courtesy of Mike McNabb

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Craig Basinger, CFA

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.

Craig and his team bring a transparent and cost-efficient approach to investment management. The team provides asset allocation OCIO services and directly manages over $1 billion in assets. The team manages dividend mandates, quantitative risk reduction strategies and asset allocation services.