Given the current elevated market volatility, we think now is a good time to revisit important value metrics with Sears Holdings employees and retirees in our four-part series. In the third part of this four-part value series, we will look at the Dividend Yield ratio.
We believe the Dividend Yield ratio can be a valuable tool in planning for Sears Holdings employees' retirements. Investors are often looking for ways for their clients to beat the market. If you're one of those investors, you may want to consider the following strategy that has been implemented by the investment greats. Some value investors have historically beat the average annualized returns of the S&P 500, and many have successful track records spanning several decades to prove it. The most famous value investor, of course, is Warren Buffett, but there are many others, including Benjamin Graham, David Dodd, Charlie Munger, Christopher Browne, and Seth Klarman.
This investment style focuses on four metrics that characterize a value investment. These four metrics include the Price-to-Earnings Ratio, the Price-to-Cash Flow Ratio, High Dividend Yield, and the Price-to-Book Ratio. These metrics, as you will see, are strong indicators of undervalued security. If undervalued security is brought back to fair value then we would see positive returns on that security. We will examine the effect of investing based on certain characteristics and how their investment returns are correlated.
The dividend yield is a popular value metric for investors for two reasons. First, it’s the obvious metric for investors favoring income over capital gains. Second, unlike earnings or cash flow, dividends are actually paid out to shareholders, and therefore independently verifiable. Where other metrics like price-to-book value, earnings or cash flow rely on management providing a true accounting of a company’s performance, the dividend is tangible proof of excess free cash flow. Thus, the argument goes, the dividend yield provides the most reliable picture of a company’s business performance, and prospects, which in turn may lead to better investment decisions and investment performance.
We understand the importance of research-driven solutions for Sears Holdings employees and retirees. Set out to the right, are the results of two Fama and French backtests of the dividend yield data from 1926 to 2013. As of December 2013, there were 3,393 firms in the sample. The value decile contained the 198 stocks with the highest earnings yield, and the glamour decile contained the 137 stocks with the lowest earnings yield (the deciles are smaller than 1/10th of the stocks in the sample because 1,894 stocks pay no dividend at all) (Carlisle-Div, P2).
The average size of glamour stocks is $8.60 billion and the average size of value stocks is $3.06 billion. Portfolios are formed on June 30 and rebalanced annually. In this backtest, the two portfolios are weighted by market capitalization, which means that bigger firms contribute more to the performance of the portfolio, and smaller firms contribute less. Here we can see that the value decile has outperformed the glamour decile, returning 10.3 percent compounded (13.4 percent in the average year) over the full period versus 8.3 percent for the glamour decile (11.3 percent in the average year) (Carlisle-Div, P3)
These returns are considerably lower than the returns found for the price-to-earnings and cash-flow ratios discussed previously. The reason is that the earnings and cash flow back tests ran back to only 1951, and the dividend yield data, like the book value return data, begins in 1926. The difference is partly due to the 1929 crash, which had an oversized impact on returns. The crash is visible on the chart and striking; it took almost twenty years for the value decile to fully recover.
To make a comparison possible of dividend yield’s performance to the performance of book, earnings, and cash flow over the same period, it's important that we also show Sears Holdings employees and retirees the measured returns beginning in 1951. Since 1951 the high dividend yield value decile has generated a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.4 percent and an average annual return (AAR) of 13.6 percent (Carlisle-Div, P5). Over the same period, the glamour decile returned a CAGR of 9.6 percent and an AAR of 12.9 percent. These returns are still considerably lower than the returns generated by the low PB, PCF, and PE studies over the same period.
The value premium is the outperformance of the value decile over the glamour decile. This chart provided for Sears Holdings employees and retirees shows the yearly returns of each of the value and glamour deciles, the value premium (value-glamour) in each year, and the rolling average from the start of the data in 1926.
The rolling average tells a sad story for value relative to glamour: The value premium has gradually disappeared over time. Over the 73 years of data to 2000 it was actually zero, but it has slightly recovered since then to be 1.8 percent compounded over the full period (Carlisle-Div, P7). (The rolling average is the annualized average return for over the 5 yrs. following each year-long period (sometimes called a 5-year rolling return)
The following chart provided for Sears Holdings employees and retirees shows the returns to each of the deciles sorted by dividend yield (1 is glamour, and 10 is value). This chart shows that the dividend yield is a fair, but not great, metric for sorting stocks into value and glamour portfolios. This is due to the fact that less than half of all stocks pay dividends (only 44 percent pay dividends). A better comparison might be the dividend payers to the 1,894 stocks in the non-dividend paying cohort. The non-dividend payers underperformed all the dividend payers, generating a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.0 percent and an average annual return (AAR) of 13.5 percent over the full period (and, since 1951, a CAGR of 8.4 percent and an AAR of 13.2 percent) (Carlisle-Div, P8).
As we’ve discussed previously, value’s out. performance over glamour is not a historical anomaly. If we examine just the period since 1999, we find that value has been the better bet. Though value started out almost 40 percent behind in 1999, it outperformed glamour over the period since 1999, beating it by 5.2 percent compounded, and 6.5 percent in the average year–about the same differential for the low PB study (Carlisle-Div, P10). Market capitalization-weighted returns are useful for demonstrating that the outperformance of value over glamour is not due to the value portfolio containing small-cap stocks. Unless you’re running an index (or hugging an index), they’re not really meaningful.
The easiest portfolio weighting scheme is to simply equally weight each position. (If we’re prepared to put up with a little extra volatility for a little extra return, we can also Kelly weight our best ideas). Kelly Weighting is determined by the Kelly Criterion which is a formula used to determine what percentage of their capital should be used in each trade to maximize long-term growth. There are two key components to the formula (Kelly % = W- [(1 - W) / R]): the winning probability factor (W) and the win/loss ratio (R). The winning probability is the probability trade will have a positive return.
The win/loss ratio is equal to the total positive trade amounts divided by the total negative trading amounts. The result of the formula will tell investors what percentage of their total capital that they should apply to each investment. Here are the equal weight return statistics for dividend yield.
In the equal weight backtest, value generated 12.7 percent compounded return (16.1 percent on average), beating out glamour’s 11.6 percent compounded return (15.5 percent on average) (Carlisle-Div, P11).
Since 1951, the equally weighted high dividend yield value decile has generated a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.5 percent and an average annual return (AAR) of 15.7 percent. Over the same period the glamour decile returned a CAGR of 12.5 percent and an AAR of 15.5 percent. These returns are still slightly lower than the returns generated by PB, PCF and PE over the same period (Carlisle-Div, P12).
Again, the value premium was never very large for the equal weight portfolios and has gradually diminished to 1.1 percent compounded over the full period. We see again that the dividend yield doesn’t do a great job sorting glamour and value portfolios. The dividend payers do, however, comprehensively outperform the non-dividend paying cohort, which returned a CAGR of 13.4 percent and an AAR of 21.2 percent over the full period (and, since 1951, a CAGR of 12.4 percent and an AAR or 18.3 percent) (Carlisle-Div, P14). For this reason, we believe- dividend yields can be a valuable tool for Sears Holdings employees.
Michael Keppler, who wrote “The Importance of Dividend Yields in Country Selection”, focused on the effect of stock returns based on dividend yield. He examined Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, Norway, Singapore/Malaysia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. The study assumes each quarter an equal weighted portfolio is composed by dividing each of the 18 Morgan Stanley international equity indexes into quartiles based on their dividend yield. As seen in the following graph, the highest dividend yielding quartile significantly outperforms its low dividend paying counterparts.
The highest paying dividend quartile returned 18.49% compounded and 19.08% compounded when adjust to US dollars. The lowest paying quartile only returned 5.74% and 10.31% compounded when converted to US dollars. The MSCI World Index returned 12.14% compounded annually and 13.26% when converted to US dollars (Tweedy Browne, p.32). We can see from this evidence that high paying dividend companies significantly outperform non-dividend paying companies.
While there is a slight correlation that high dividend companies outperform low dividend companies, we must agree that ultimately it is the fact that dividend paying companies historically outperform non-dividend paying companies.
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In a more recent study by Manning & Napier Advisors, LLC, they find that high dividend yield stocks still outperform the low to no dividend-paying stocks. They look at the performance, for a 25-year period (1990-2015), of high cash flow yield and high dividend yield stocks independently as well as how they can be used together.
As can be seen in Figure 2, screening for high dividend yield stocks can protect the downside. This is due to the fact that the companies that pay higher dividends are returning capital to their investors which eliminates the uncertainty that comes with companies carrying cash. In fact, Figure 3 shows that a significant (over 40%) part of total return from 1926 to 2015 has come from dividends as opposed to capital appreciation.
In addition, we'd like to point out to Sears Holdings employees that higher dividend yields have generated better capital stability for investors. Figure 5 shows that higher dividend yields have demonstrated lower downside capture since 1990. This limited downside can be important for Sears Holdings retirees looking for both current income and low volatility.
As can be seen in these three studies we've provided for Sears Holdings employees, it is apparent that by simply screening for high-dividend stocks with no fundamental analysis it is possible to outperform non-dividend paying stocks. Unlike the P/E, P/CF ratios, and ultimately the P/B ratio, which are all very useful metrics for sorting cheap stocks from expensive stocks, the dividend yield is less useful. This is likely because only around 44 percent of all stocks pay dividends. The message seems to be clear, that expensive stocks and undervalued stocks that pay dividends outperform all non-dividend paying stocks. Reinforcing this metric are the value-oriented track records of notable names such as Warren Buffet, Bruce Berkowitz, and Seth Klarmen who all use the dividend yield as a supplemental indicator for their investment universe.
The Retirement Group is a nation-wide group of financial advisors who work together as a team.
We focus entirely on retirement planning and the design of retirement portfolios for transitioning corporate employees. Each representative of the group has been hand selected by The Retirement Group in select cities of the United States. Each advisor was selected based on their pension expertise, experience in financial planning, and portfolio construction knowledge.
TRG takes a teamwork approach in providing the best possible solutions for our clients’ concerns. The Team has a conservative investment philosophy and diversifies client portfolios with laddered bonds, CDs, mutual funds, ETFs, Annuities, Stocks and other investments to help achieve their goals. The team addresses Retirement, Pension, Tax, Asset Allocation, Estate, and Elder Care issues. This document utilizes various research tools and techniques. A variety of assumptions and judgmental elements are inevitably inherent in any attempt to estimate future results and, consequently, such results should be viewed as tentative estimations. Changes in the law, investment climate, interest rates, and personal circumstances will have profound effects on both the accuracy of our estimations and the suitability of our recommendations. The need for ongoing sensitivity to change and for constant re-examination and alteration of the plan is thus apparent.
Therefore, we encourage you to have your plan updated a few months before your potential retirement date as well as an annual review. It should be emphasized that neither The Retirement Group, LLC nor any of its employees can engage in the practice of law or accounting and that nothing in this document should be taken as an effort to do so. We look forward to working with tax and/or legal professionals you may select to discuss the relevant ramifications of our recommendations.
Throughout your retirement years we will continue to update you on issues affecting your retirement through our complimentary and proprietary newsletters, workshops and regular updates. You may always reach us at (800) 900-5867.
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Carlisle, Tobias. “Investing Using the Price-to-Earnings Ratio and Earnings Yield (Backtests 1951 to 2013)”. May 26, 2014. <http://greenbackd.com/2014/05/26/price-to-earnings-ratio-backtest-1951-to-2013/>.
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Hobson, Ben. “Don't get your head turned by glamour shares: How David Dreman perfected the art of contrarian stock-picking”. April 2013 <http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/diyinvesting/article-2308111/David-Dreman-art-contrarian-stock-picking.html>.
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Tweedy Browne Company LLC. “What Has Worked in Investing: Studies of Investment Approaches and Characteristics Associated with Exceptional Returns.” 1992.<http://www.tweedy.com/resources/library_docs/papers/WhatHasWorkedFundVersionWeb.pdf>.
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Manning & Napier Advisors. “Free Cash Flow and Dividends: How A Focus On Yield Can Help Investors Provide for Today and Prepare for Tomorrow” April 2016.
How does the Sears Holdings Pension Plan differentiate between normal retirement, early retirement, and late retirement options for Kmart participants? In what ways do these options influence the retirement planning process for employees of Sears Holdings, and what specific considerations should Kmart employees be aware of when choosing one of these retirement paths, particularly in relation to their vested status?
Differentiation of Retirement Options: The Sears Holdings Pension Plan offers distinct options for normal, early, and late retirement. Normal retirement is available at age 65 or after five years of plan participation, whichever is later. Early retirement can be taken from age 55 but before 65, provided the employee is vested, with benefits subject to actuarial reduction unless certain conditions are met (like having at least 90 points, which is a sum of age and years of credited service). Late retirement pertains to any retirement after the normal retirement age, with pensions recalculated to reflect the delay in benefit commencement.
Considering the frozen status of the Sears Holdings Pension Plan, how does this impact the benefits eligibility for Kmart employees, and what implications does it have for their retirement savings strategies? In what ways should current employees factor in this frozen status when evaluating their overall retirement readiness and potential alternatives outside of the company plan?
Impact of Frozen Status: The freezing of the Sears Holdings Pension Plan on January 31, 1996, means that there have been no new accruals of benefits or participants since that date. For Kmart employees, this impacts their benefits eligibility by capping the pension benefits at levels earned up to the freeze date. Employees need to consider this stagnation in benefits when planning for retirement, potentially seeking additional retirement savings avenues to bridge any shortfall.
What are the essential calculations involved in determining the retirement benefits under the Sears Holdings Pension Plan for Kmart employees? Specifically, how do the Career Average Pay and Final Average Pay formulas come into play, and what factors should employees consider when estimating their future retirement payouts?
Essential Calculations for Retirement Benefits: Pension benefits for Kmart employees under the Sears Holdings Pension Plan are calculated using either the Career Average Pay or the Final Average Pay formulas. These calculations take into account an employee's years of credited service and compensation up to the freeze date. Factors like estimated Social Security benefits and specific formulas (such as a deduction based on Social Security benefits under the Final Average Pay formula) play crucial roles in determining the final pension payout.
How can Sears Holdings employees best navigate the process of applying for benefits under the Pension Plan? What specific steps should participants take to ensure their applications are processed correctly, and what important deadlines should they be aware of to avoid any negative consequences on their retirement benefits?
Navigating the Benefits Application Process: To apply for pension benefits, employees must submit a formal application, ideally 30 to 90 days before the intended commencement date. It is crucial to ensure all personal information, including marital status and spouse details, is up-to-date to avoid delays or inaccuracies in benefit processing. Missing application deadlines can lead to postponed benefit payments or unwanted default options.
In what situations can Kmart employees expect to receive a Deferred Vested Pension, and how is the calculation for this pension affected by their previous employment and vesting service? Employees should be aware of the important factors influencing their eligibility and the steps necessary to maintain their retirement benefits after leaving the company.
Eligibility and Calculation for Deferred Vested Pension: A Deferred Vested Pension is available to employees who leave the company after becoming vested but prior to qualifying for retirement. The calculation mirrors that of a normal retirement pension, with possible early commencement reductions. Understanding the timing of benefit commencement and the potential reductions for early start is vital for planning.
How does the Sears Holdings Pension Plan address tax considerations for employees receiving both monthly payments and lump sum payments upon retirement? What tax implications should Kmart participants be aware of, particularly in relation to IRS rules for distributions and potential penalties for early withdrawal?
Tax Implications of Pension Receipt: Pension payments, whether monthly or lump sum, are subject to federal taxes. Monthly benefits are taxed as ordinary income, while lump sums might be eligible for special tax treatments or rollover options to defer taxes. It’s important for Kmart employees to consider these implications and possibly consult with a tax advisor to optimize tax liability.
What are the rights and protections afforded to Kmart participants under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) as they navigate their retirement benefits with the Sears Holdings Pension Plan? How can employees leverage these rights to ensure they are receiving all the benefits to which they are entitled?
ERISA Rights and Protections: Under ERISA, Kmart employees are entitled to certain rights including the ability to appeal denied benefits, access to plan information, and assurances of fair and equitable treatment of their benefits. Leveraging these protections ensures that employees receive all due benefits.
What steps should Kmart employees take to update their personal information to ensure they continue receiving their benefits without interruption, especially in the context of missing participants or uncashed checks? What resources and contacts at Sears Holdings are available to assist with these updates?
Updating Personal Information: Maintaining accurate personal information with the pension plan is crucial for uninterrupted benefit payments. Employees should promptly update changes such as address, marital status, or beneficiaries to prevent issues with benefit distributions or lost checks.
How does the process of transferring between affiliated employers impact pension benefits for Kmart employees under the Sears Holdings Pension Plan? What considerations should be taken into account concerning Credited Service and Vesting Service during such transfers, and how can employees ensure they do not lose any entitled benefits?
Impact of Transfers Between Affiliated Employers: Transferring between Sears Holdings’ affiliated employers can affect pension benefits differently depending on whether the employer participates in the pension plan. It's essential to understand how such transfers impact credited and vesting service accruals.
For Kmart employees seeking more information about their benefits under the Sears Holdings Pension Plan, what is the best way to contact company representatives? How can they effectively communicate their questions or concerns to ensure they receive accurate and timely information regarding their retirement benefits?
Contacting Plan Representatives: Kmart employees seeking clarity on their pension benefits should contact the Sears Holdings Pension Service Center. Effective communication, including prepared questions and necessary documentation, will aid in obtaining accurate and comprehensive information.