Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Stocks
ETFs
Reviews
Retirement
Guides
About
Premium
Disclaimer: The writer of this article or employees of Stocktrades Ltd may have positions in securities listed in this
article. Stocktrades Ltd may also be compensated via affiliate links in this post. Stocktrades Ltd will run
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 1/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
We’ve got an amazing piece of content for you today that will be an eye-opener for many investors. In
Last month we talked about the pitfalls of chasing high yields. Today, we will
look at the opposite end of the spectrum – avoiding low yields.
While investment strategies always depend on one’s own investment goals, we believe avoiding low-
yielding stocks is a mistake, especially in the context of dividend growth investing.
With the sheer amount of income based influencers and websites online, we’re definitely swimming
against the current with our opinions on this. And often, we do face heavy criticism. But historical
returns have been firmly on our side for decades now, and we’re going to highlight that later on in this
e-mail.
Avoiding low yielding companies can be especially costly for those new to the market and early in their
investment careers.
I was a staunch dividend growth investor. Over the years, I took a more balanced approach by
introducing growth to my portfolio. That said, the bulk of my portfolio is still made up of strong dividend
growers.
Anything I read back in the day relating to dividend growth investing, most of the experts had some
sort of starting yield in their screeners, usually in the 2.5-3% range minimum. These so-called ‘experts’
in the dividend growth field would screen out any company that didn’t meet the minimum yield criteria.
I never understood it and still don’t, as one can potentially miss out on some excellent investments.
Again, we’ll discuss this and show real-world examples later in this piece, results that will
likely surprise you. They definitely surprised us.
Let’s start with debunking the biggest misconception about low-yielding stocks
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 2/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
The misconception is that a low yielder is a low dividend growth stock. This is categorically false.
Looking at every Canadian Dividend Aristocrat (those with 5-year plus dividend growth streaks) that
has raised the dividend by an average annual rate of at least 10%, approximately 55% of those have
yields lower than 3%.
So why is this? How can yield stay so low with growth so high?
There is really only one way this can happen, and that is if the stock price is increasing. When we
think about the definition of yield, it is simply the stock’s price compared to its dividend.
Unless there are some significant missteps within company management, a fast-growing dividend will
mean fast-growing earnings. And considering in the vast majority of cases the market values
companies based on a multiple of their earnings, we can now see why their share price would be
increasing as well.
Of all the Canadian Dividend Aristocrats with yields below 3%, approximately 30% of them had at
least one instance of a dividend cut in their history. This compares to 42%~ for those with yields above
3%.
One can extrapolate from this that a low yield likely means a safer dividend. It doesn’t, however,
guarantee that the dividend is safe. In fact, there are many companies with yields less than 3% whose
dividend looks quite suspect and have payout ratios well above 100% or in the negative. As usual, one
must still do their due diligence on the safety of that dividend, even if it has a lower yield.
However, statistically, you are more likely to face a dividend cut with a higher yielding stock.
Now let’s turn our attention to the single biggest reason why we believe it is a
mistake to ignore low yields in an attempt to chase income
You’ve likely heard us talk about the importance of total returns in the past, but dividend investors tend
to have a bias of preferring high yield over total return.
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 3/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
If one needs dividends today, such as those that are in retirement, then we can understand why one
would worry less about total returns and more about the annual income they generate.
However, if one does not need access to income from their investments, then in most cases they are
leaving money on the table by attempting to generate income now.
Let’s circle back to the Canadian Dividend Aristocrats. Of all those companies that yield greater than
3%, only 7.6% of them have a five-year double-digit compound annual growth rate in terms of their
In contrast, 62.5% of Aristocrats with yields below 3% have achieved five-year CAGRs in the double-
digits. That is quite the statistic.
Now, we know what you are thinking – share price appreciation doesn’t include total returns. We need
to be including dividends and even the potential reinvestment of those dividends.
That’s right – so let’s illustrate with some data using total returns
We wanted to see how the overall returns of a portfolio that contains exclusively low-yielding Canadian
stocks would stack up to a portfolio of some of the most popular high-yielding options in the country
today.
We will admit, when we first started this comparison, we knew low-yielding stocks would outperform
the high-yielders. What we didn’t realize is how truly drastic the separation is.
We made up two model portfolios, each of which contains an equal weighting of 8 stocks. The low-
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 4/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
BCE (TSE:BCE)
On the high-yielding end, Manulife Financial and Power Corporation have been highlighted in the past.
But for the most part, these are income stocks here in Canada that have large volumes and are
In the chart below, you will see the total returns from the low-yielding portfolio when compared to the
high-yielding portfolio. Of note, this would include the investor reinvesting the dividends to allow
compounding.
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 5/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
As we can see, despite the ability to take the dividends and reinvest them, the “compounding” effect in
terms of overall returns was felt significantly more with the portfolio of low-yielding companies.
This is another misconception investors have about compounding. Many feel they need to receive a
high yield from the company in order to buy more shares. The common “snowball effect” mentality.
When in reality, compounding can occur at a faster rate if the company is able to reinvest the capital
internally to fuel growth.
In fact, the low-yielding portfolio put up significant annualized returns of nearly 19%. This not only
If we look at hard dollar numbers instead of percentages, $100,000 invested in the low-yielding
portfolio 10 years ago today would have you sitting on $560,000. The high-yielding? $220,700.
Keep in mind, you also would have had to re-invest the dividends in both of these portfolios over that
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 6/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
time span, so you would not have benefited from the actual income stream from the high-yielders.
For many, the justification for this outperformance may come from the idea that many of the
companies in the high-yielding portfolio were large, established blue-chip companies a decade ago.
It makes sense that a portfolio of smaller companies could outperform them. Once the low-yielding
And while this is true in the fact the low-yielding portfolio has not grown as fast over more recent time
spans, its outperformance versus the higher-yielding portfolio has been larger in recent times. Let’s
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 7/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
Why is this the case, and can we expect the same thing moving forward?
There is a logical reason as to why this is happening, and why it is likely to continue happening
moving forward.
As a company matures there are often fewer opportunities for organic growth. Reinvested capital back
into the company is unlikely to be fruitful for investors. So instead, they begin to pay larger dividends.
It is difficult for a company to be paying out a 5%+ dividend yield and delivering strong internal growth.
It’s highly likely that the company is paying out that dividend because it cannot find anywhere better to
spend it. This is why you’ll often see high-yielding companies with low earnings growth.
On the flip side, low-yielding companies are often finding ways to spend cash flow organically to
expand the business. There is no reason for them to pay out a large dividend, as the money is better
spent internally, fueling earnings growth, and thus dividend growth.
A core valuation model in the stock market is price to earnings. If a company can continually grow its
earnings, its share price will grow. If it can use internal capital to fuel growth rather than paying it out
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 8/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
Not so fast. There are plenty of poor low-yielding companies. So don’t get the idea that every low-
The point of this week’s newsletter was not to convince you to sell all of your high-yielding stocks, or to
The point of this week’s newsletter was to get those who have the tendency to say:
” I’m not going to bother looking at that company, it only yields 1%”
Wrapping it up
As you can see, if one ignores low yields they are likely missing out on some especially high-quality
In our low-yielding portfolio, it’s not like we cherry-picked small-cap growth companies. It contains
some of the largest companies in Canada in Loblaw, Canadian National Railway, Alimentation
One of the hardest things to do as investors is to learn, adapt, and put aside biases – the latter being
Stocktrades.ca was founded in 2016 by investors Stocks
the most difficult. Investing is not black and white.
Daniel Kent and Dylan Callaghan, with the ETFs
ultimate goal of providing Canadian investors
with the best possible tools to increase their Helpful Guides
At the end of the day, investors should do what is best for them. However, to be a successful retail
Reviews
investor, one must always be learning, willing to listen, and let one’s bias be challenged.
investment portfolios. In an industry plagued with
misinformation,inourourmain
Unfortunately, priority is staunch
experience,
Personal
to maintaindividend growth Finance
investors will have strong opinions on why
complete objectivity
low-yielders should and bring investors
be ignored. This is around
Retirement
especially true of pundits that claim to be experts in their field.
the world accurate, timely and high quality
investment
In news and
an age where information.
everyone is an expert on social media, be weary of those who don’t have an open
mind and those who insist that their way is the only ‘right’ way.
LEGAL PREMIUM
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 9/10
4/20/24, 10:27 PM The Low-Yield, High Dividend Growth Study - Stocktrades
About Us Join
At the end of the day, it always comes back to one’s investment goals. But the key here is that
DISCLAIMER:
Stocktrades is an independent media portal covering the development related to stocks on the TSX. However, Stocktrades
is by no means associated with the Toronto Stock Exchange, or any of the companies we cover. All content on Stocktrades
is the views of the individual reporters. Stocktrades offers strictly investment opinions, not investment advice. It is important
to seek out a qualified investment, tax or legal professional before making any decisions related to your own personal
investments. The information on Stocktrades.ca represents the views of the authors and should not be misconstrued as
advice.
https://www.stocktrades.ca/the-low-yield-high-dividend-growth-study/?ck_subscriber_id=2644454684 10/10