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October 2024



Equity Income: Setting the Table With Valuation




Tony Hu Director

  • Divided stocks look fairly valued and, relative to the market, very undervalued.
  • Valuation isn’t a catalyst, but can provide downside risk management.
  • Lower rates generally are viewed as positive for dividend stocks.

We spend the majority of our time evaluating our holdings’ businesses, continuously re-confirming our confidence in their long-term free cash flow and dividend growth rates, and using positioning to to minimize the volatility in the portfolio from outsized risks to both the upside and downside. While the rate-cutting cycle is generally viewed as positive for dividend stocks, we ultimately don’t know what the future will bring, and so we monitor various metrics to get a sense of where we stand.  Here, we examine valuation as a short-cut look at risk management.  The proposition: Lower valuation means less risk to the downside and more opportunity to the upside — in both absolute and relative terms.

Chart 1 shows the forward P/E multiples of the S&P and CNR’s attractive dividend index.  As the statistics on Table 1 show, the S&P’s forward valuation is almost two standard deviations above its long-term mean, widely viewed as overvalued.  Attractive dividend stocks are trading within one standard deviation of their long-term average, valued fairly vs. the historic range. As a result, relative to each other, the gap between the market multiple and dividend stock multiple is more than two standard deviations above the long-term average. The gap has been wider less than 8% of the time over the more than 20-year history of the dividend index1.  

 


Chart 1: Valuation Comparison: Forward P/E

 

Source: FactSet, as of September 30, 2024. 

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. 

DJDVP vs. S&P 500 rolling trailing 5-year returns.  

 

And so, despite having risen +19% year-to-date, we believe dividend stocks remain fairly valued, and, relative to the market, continue to look very undervalued.  While valuation alone is not a catalyst, this should mean that if we face some unexpected macroeconomic adversity, there is less room for dividend stocks to correct than the broader market.  Conversely, if we can look ahead to a soft landing and better growth in the wake of resolved election uncertainty, dividend stocks are better positioned to benefit from both rising earnings and greater room for expanding multiples.  

The near-term performance outcome is dependent on how the environment unfolds.  We believe that valuation provides some assurance that dividend stocks remain well positioned, with risk well balanced, for multiple outcomes. While we wait to see what happens, we continue to focus our time analyzing our holdings and looking forward to 3Q24 earnings season.

Table 1: Valuation Comparison: Forward P/E Summary Statistics

Source: FactSet, as of September 30, 2024. 

Dividend Stocks Index: DJ US Select Dividend Index.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. 

1FactSet, as of September 30, 2024. 




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