Preferred Dividend Coverage Ratio

  

Categories: Stocks, Metrics

Disappointing the common folk is one kind of problem. But disappointing the big shots is a different trauma entirely. It can cause serious problems. They ask to talk to your manager. They will speak to their attorneys. They will let their brother-in-law, the State Senator, know about the situation.

In the finance world, common shareholders represent the common folk. Preferred stock holders represent the big shots. If a company wants to know if it's in danger of disappointing those big shots, it can use the preferred dividend coverage ratio.

The figure tracks how easily a company can cover the preferred dividends it owes to holders of preferred stock. It compares the company's net income to its preferred dividend obligations. The higher the ratio, the better off the company is (the more earnings it has compared to its obligations).

Companies can cut common stock dividends or decide not to pay them at all. Shareholders will howl and the stock will plummet, but those are options the firm has. Preferred dividends are different. The company is obligated to pay them.

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Finance: What is Dividend Coverage/the D...7 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is dividend coverage and what is the dividend payout

00:07

ratio? whatever.com has earnings big earnings a hundred million dollars worth

00:16

of earnings this year from sales of a whole lot of whatever's the board green [People working in a factory]

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lights a dividend payment of 40 million bucks that is the company will pay 10

00:26

million dollars to its common shareholders of record four times in

00:30

this next year the payout is 40 million because well

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you know it's paid out and yeah clever titling know is never a thing on Wall

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Street and the payout ratio is 40 over a hundred that hundred million of earnings [Payout ratio calculation appears]

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or forty percent well why does the payout ratio even matter?

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well companies hate having to cut their dividends and they love raising them if

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the former well stock prices usually crash if the latter well they usually go

00:57

up and companies love it when their stock prices go up duh so what would [Whatever.com share price rises]

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happen if whatever dot-com stumbled in its earnings tumbled and then

01:05

shareholders mumbled that the earnings payout ratio had crumbled that is... okay

01:10

stop with the rhyming bad timing okay now we're stopping and yeah that is what

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if the earnings of whatever.com went down next year to only 50 million

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remember they were a hundred million now they're only 50....hmm

01:21

problem because now the payout ratio is 80 percent 40 over 50 yeah very

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difficult situation the company thought it would have tons of earnings to cover

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its dividend at the forty million dollar level more or less forever

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but clearly it did not so now what well if earnings recover and go back to a [Man discussing whatever.com's earnings]

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hundred million dollars on their way to the 300 million they projected well,

01:45

then life is grand no sweat no heavy decisions to be made

01:48

but what if earnings fall further to be only thirty million the following year

01:53

well then whatever dot-com has to either borrow money or deplete its cash

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reserves just to cover its dividend in which case the payout ratio would then

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be over a hundred percent meaning that the earnings were 30 million and the [Earnings appear]

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dividend was to be forty well then the payout ratio would be 40 over 30

02:12

133% ouch can't do that for very long without going bankrupt so payout ratios [Wheel spins and lands on bankrupt]

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matter because they give a sense for the safety or certainty that that dividend

02:22

will continue at its present rate if the ratio is low well odds are good the

02:27

company could certainly afford to raise the dividend over time or at least not

02:30

cut it yeah for a very long time ideally and if the ratio is high well your [Dividend cut with scissors]

02:35

bottom line may soon be bottoming out back-end load there if i ever saw it...

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