Is Sage The Perfect Dividend Growth Stock?

 | Aug 29, 2018 09:06

Accounting software firm Sage has generated dividend growth of more than 8% per year over the last decade. That’s impressive, but is it enough to justify the company’s measly 2.4% dividend yield?

At first glance I’d say yes. After all, a 2.4% income growing at 8% per year will give you a total annual return of 10.4% if the share price grows in line with the dividend.

But investing is not quite that simple, so we’ll need to look at Sage and its financial results in a little more detail.

h3 A world-leader in accounting and payroll-related software/h3

Sage Group (LON:SGE) started as a three-man operation in the early 1980s after Graham Wylie developed what became Sage’s core accounting software while still a student.

The company was almost immediately successful and by the end of the 1980s it was listed on the London Stock Exchange. In 1999 it joined the FTSE 100 and it has been there ever since.

As you might expect, this FTSE 100 company it is no longer a three-man operation. It now has 13,000 employees, over three million customers in 23 countries and, according to its website, is:

The global market leader for technology that helps businesses of all sizes manage everything from money to people

h3 Moving from lumpy revenue to smooth recurring revenue/h3

Way back in Ye Olden Days, software vendors used to sell software applications to customers, typically on some sort of disk (floppy or otherwise).

The customer would pay for the software, receive a disk in the post, install it and use it for all eternity without ever having to pay another penny.

The software vendor would bring out a new version of the software and then hope that its previous customers would buy the new version in order to use the new version’s awesome new features.

But many existing customers wouldn’t upgrade because the old version, which they’d already paid for, was perfectly adequate.

Clearly this was not advantageous to the software vendor. Fortunately for them, Web 2.0 technologies appeared in the early 2000s, bringing far more interactivity to previously static websites. On the back of those technologies, Software as a service (SaaS) was born (or more accurately, went mainstream).

SaaS allows users to access software applications through a web browser in a way that feels pretty much like an installed application rather than the old Web 1.0 static webpage.

Users like this because:

  • They can access the same app (as software applications are now known) through their PC, Mac, mobile device or pretty much anything else that can run a modern web browser.
  • Their data is probably safer because it should be stored in professionally managed servers rather than on their laptop (so if the user’s laptop is run over by a bus they won’t lose all their data).
  • The software is automatically updated, so they always have the latest version and don’t have to fuss around installing new software.
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As for the software vendor, they get to charge customers on a recurring basis for access to those software services.

Because of these advantages, the old model of customers paying a single lump sum up front is being rapidly replaced with a model where they pay less up front but more on an ongoing basis.

For companies like Sage this is excellent news because it makes their revenue streams incredibly reliable and robust and increases the lifetime value of each customer.

It also makes it easier for companies like Sage to up-sell and cross-sell customers onto more expensive versions or additional subscription software, because once the user is logged in, the company can dazzle them with whatever messages (adverts) it likes.

h3 Customers for life (whether they like it or not)/h3

One last thing I want to mention before moving on to some number crunching is the barriers to exit that Sage’s customers face.

Barriers to exit, otherwise known as switching costs, are a form of competitive advantage where it becomes hard for a customer to switch to a different supplier.

For example, the switching costs for Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) are virtually zero because I can buy the much cheaper Tesco (LON:TSCO) Cola for no extra effort (yes they’re different products, but to my taste buds they’re close enough to be substitutes).

But this isn’t true for Sage’s customers.

If I ran my company’s accounts, payroll and who knows what else through Sage software, it would be hard for me to switch to a competitor like Xero (AX:XRO), Crunch or Zoho Books.

It wouldn’t be impossible, but I would have to fiddle around backing up financial data to spreadsheets, setting up my company on the new software and then becoming familiar with how the new software works.

So even if Xero were better than the Sage equivalent (I don’t use either so I have no idea) I would balk at the idea of switching, just because of the time and effort needed to do it.

h3 A good company, but is it worth its current price?/h3

In summary then, I like Sage. It’s a FTSE 100 company moving full speed into the world of SaaS and cloud computing and that’s probably a good thing.

It’s a market leader, it has lots of recurring revenue coming in from all over the world, and businesses need accounting and payroll software regardless of whether there’s a recession.

So it’s a defensive company and a steady growth company, but that low dividend yield still bothers me.

I think it’s time to do a bit of number crunching to see if an investment in Sage has any reasonable chance of producing the 10%+ annual returns I’m aiming for over the next five years or more.

h3 Steady above average growth of revenues, earnings and dividends/h3

The chart below shows Sage’s growth over the last few years