Waste Management, Inc. (WM) provides integrated waste management services in North America. The company offers collection, transfer, recycling, disposal, and waste-to-energy services. This dividend challenger has increased distributions for the past 7 years in a row. The latest dividend increase was in December 2009, when the company raised distributions by 8.60% to 31.50 cents/share.
Over the past decade this dividend growth stock has delivered an annualized total return of 8.20% to its shareholders.
The company has managed to deliver increase in its EPS from a deficit of $0.16/share in 2000 to a profit of $2.01 in 2009. Analysts expect Waste Management to earn $2.05 per share in 2010 and $2.30/share in 2011.
The company is a leader in waste management in the US. The waste the consumers generate would likely increase in the future, which should bode well for business. Future growth could also come from strategic acquisitions. The company also generates sufficient excess cash flows that it uses to cover distributions and stock buybacks.
The company’s return on equity has remained above 15% for the majority of the past decade. Rather than focus on absolute values for this indicator, I generally want to see at least a stable return on equity over time.
The annual dividend payment has increased substantially from one cent/share in 2003 to 31.50 cents/share in 2010. Since 2004, when a more generous dividend policy toward dividend investors was implemented, quarterly distributions have increased by 9% per year.
The dividend payout ratio has increased over the past decade, reaching 58% in 2009. Based off 2010 forward earnings, the dividend payout would decrease to 61%. Waste Management seems to have reached the limit to its sustainable dividend growth. Without earnings growth over the next few years, future growth in distributions will be limited at best. A lower payout is always a plus, since it leaves room for consistent dividend growth minimizing the impact of short-term fluctuations in earnings.
Currently, Waste Management is attractively valued at 17 times 2010 earnings and yields 3.60%. In comparison, rival Republic Services (RSG) yields 2.90% and trades at a P/E of 27. Given Waste Management's inability to grow EPS over the past five years, the high dividend payout ratio and the fact that the company is three years away from being eligible for inclusion in the dividend achievers index, I would rate it as a hold for the time being.
Full Disclosure: None
Relevant Articles:
- AT&T Raises Distributions by 2.4%
- Why Dividend Growth Stocks Rock?
- Four Characteristics of The Best Dividend Growth Stocks
- The ten year dividend growth requirement
Popular Posts
-
The Dividend Aristocrats list includes S&P 500 companies which have managed to increase dividends for at least 25 consecutive years. I ...
-
A dividend champion is a company which has a 25 year record of annual dividend increases. There are only 146 such companies in the US toda...
-
I review the list of dividend increases, as part of my monitoring process. This exercise helps me monitor existing holdings and identify com...
-
It's fascinating that US Dividends rarely decrease. They have gone up every year, for over 80 years. The only decreases in US divide...
-
Nothing is certain in this world except for death and taxes. For many dividend growth investors , this could be characterized as a feeling t...
-
The year 2024 was a record one for US Dividends. This was fueled by continued increase in earnings and by the initiation of dividends for th...
-
A dividend king is a company that has managed to increase dividends to shareholders for at least 50 years in a row. There are only 47 such ...
-
Dividend Growth Investing (DGI) is a strategic approach to stock market investing that prioritizes companies known for consistently increasi...
-
I review the dividend increases weekly, as part of my monitoring process. I haven't done this review so far in 2025, as there were too f...
-
Charlie Munger would have turned 101 today. Sadly, he passed away in November. While that is sad news, the knowledge he shared with the wor...