Apple's history of dividend payments
Apple has a long history of paying
dividends, but it also has a long gap in the middle of its dividend
history. From 1987 to 1995, it paid quarterly dividends that ranged from
$0.06 to $0.12 per share, but that was before three subsequent stock
splits that have given longtime investors 28 Apple shares for every one
share they owned during that time span. Then in 1995, Apple suspended
its dividends, choosing instead to focus on growth initiatives.
Image source: Apple.
But in 2012, Apple decided to bring back its dividend.
The company started with a split-adjusted payout of about $0.38 per
share quarterly as part of a broader package to return $45 billion in
capital to shareholders over a three-year period. The payout represented
a yield of slightly less than 2% at the time, but it began a process by
which Apple could look at further dividend growth over time.
AAPL Dividend data by YCharts.
Note: The line between 1996 and 2012 represents a discontinuity in
Apple's dividend history during which Apple paid no dividend at all,
rather than the gently sloping increase represented in the chart.
Those
increases indeed did come with regularity. In 2013, the company made a
roughly 15% increase to bring the dividend to about $0.426 per share,
and 2014 brought Apple's latest 7-for-1 stock split and a boost to $0.47
per share. Roughly 10% annual increases have followed ever since,
culminating in its most recent increase to $0.63 per share on the
dividend Apple declared on May 2, with a record date of May 15 and paid
out to shareholders on May 18.
What's next for Apple dividends?
Yet some investors are unsatisfied with what Apple has done with its dividend.
With a huge nine-figure cash hoard, it has plenty of capital to return
to shareholders, and in that light, a current yield of just 1.6% seems
lackluster at best.
There's no doubt that Apple could
afford to make greater dividend payments. Currently, the tech giant pays
out only about 28% of its projected earnings for this year, and less
than 25% of its forward earnings projections for the next year. It's
true that a lot of those earnings are generated outside the U.S. and
would therefore be subject to repatriation taxes if used to pay
dividends. But even within the bounds of current tax law, Apple would
have more latitude to make higher dividend payouts if it so chose.
The
key question is what happens with tax policy. The Trump administration
has proposed tax reform measures that would make it far easier for U.S.
companies like Apple to bring overseas cash back into the U.S. for
investment, but the details aren't yet clear. Whether Apple would be
able to use repatriated money to pay a higher dividend or would instead
have to demonstrate a commitment to more active investment within the
U.S. remains to be seen.
Still,
investors have to be aware that because of its size, even the
relatively low dividend yield that Apple pays is enough to make the
company the largest payer of dividends in the world in terms of raw
dollar payout. In addition, it has emphasized stock repurchases over
dividend increases, with more than two-thirds of its most recent $50
billion increase in capital return going toward buybacks. That has two
negative impacts on dividends in that it both leaves less money for
dividend payments and tends to boost the stock price, which makes the
dividend yield weaker. Nevertheless, investors aren't complaining about
the strong total returns that Apple stock has produced lately.
For
dividend investors, Apple has gone from a nonentity to a leader in just
five years. If its business continues to thrive, then Apple could see
even more success in growing its dividend over time and satisfying its
shareholders with strong total returns.

No comments:
Post a Comment