BAE Systems Has A Decent Dividend But Is It Good Value?

 | Mar 06, 2019 05:27

That’s because:

  1. BAE Systems (LON:BAES) is the UK’s largest defence contractor which should make it a relatively defensive company (governments may cut back on defence spending during recessions, but typically any cuts are not drastic).
  2. It has a long track record of progressive dividend growth, with the dividend going from 9.2p in 2003 to 22.2p in its recent 2018 results.
  3. It has a slightly above average dividend yield of 4.7% at its current price of 470p.

But life is rarely that simple and BAE does have a few features which make it less attractive than it might appear at first glance.

h2 Dividend growth is not matched by earnings or revenue growth/h2

Dividend growth has slowed because of a lack of earnings and revenue growth

Progressive (NYSE:PGR) dividend growth is almost a prerequisite for an attractive dividend-based investment, but on its own progressive dividend growth is not enough.

In the long-run those dividend payments have to be covered by earnings. Those earnings are, in turn, generated from revenues paid into the company by customers. And customers are paying for products and services produced by the assets of the business (e.g. factories, warehouses and stock), paid for with shareholder and debt holder capital.

So if earnings, revenues and capital employed are not going up then any dividend growth will eventually hit a ceiling.

With that in mind, the chart above shows several things:

(1) BAE’s revenues per share have gone essentially nowhere for a decade.

(2) BAE’s earnings have been quite volatile, but also show no obvious growth trend.

(3) BAE’s capital base shrank for several years following government cutbacks after the global financial crisis. This shrinkage came about through a mixture of business writedowns, disposals and ‘rightsizings‘. After 2014 the company’s capital base has returned to growth, but this a relatively short period and has yet to be reflected in consistent revenue growth.

(4) BAE’s dividend has continued to grow every year, but the rate of increase has slowed dramatically from more than 5% per year a few years ago to less than 2% per year today.

This lack of consistent growth in anything but the dividend is not the end of the world, and I wouldn’t rule out investing in BAE because of this alone.

However, averaged across capital employed, revenues and dividends, its growth has failed to match inflation over the last decade, so that has to be reflected in the purchase price.

h2 Dividend cover is wafer thin/h2

h2 BAE’s dividend is unlikely to grow without earnings growth/h2

One reason why BAE’s dividend growth has almost ground to a halt in recent years is that the company’s dividend has pretty much caught up with its earnings.

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An uncovered dividend is a classic sign of a dividend under threat, so having earnings that consistently cover the dividend is important.

In BAE’s case, its policy of progressive dividend growth and lack of earnings growth has given the company an average dividend cover over the last ten years of just 1.2.

In other words, the company has paid out 85% of its earnings over the last ten years as a dividend, and that’s a problem for a couple of reasons:

  1. The margin of safety between earnings and the dividend is relatively thin, so any small but prolonged decline in earnings is likely to put the dividend under severe pressure.
  2. With only 15% of earnings being retained, the company may find it hard to increase its investment in productive assets such as offices, factories and machinery (often called property, plant and equipment) in order to drive future growth.

Again, this isn’t the end of the world, but this lack of a margin of safety around the dividend and the potential squeeze on growth investment should also be reflected in the price.

h2 Profitability is just about acceptable/h2

BAE has relatively thin profit margins and unexciting returns on capital

I have two rules covering the returns a company makes: