Finance News

Dividends forecast to fall at least 15% in 2020


The government is reportedly looking at preventing companies that have taken loans from paying dividends

Dividend payments around the world are expected to fall at least 15% this year, even in the best-case scenario of the coronavirus crisis. 

This would see the worldwide level of dividends drop US$213bn to US$1.21trn, according to Janus Henderson, which compiles the global dividend index.

In a worst-case scenario, where all those dividends currently seen as vulnerable are cut, would see payouts collapse 35% to US$933bn.

Impact so far

The first quarter of 2020 saw only a small impact from the pandemic, with underlying dividend growth of 0.8% for the UK and Europe, Asia Pacific down 0.8% but North America, where most dividends are paid quarterly, saw growth up 5.6%.

So, despite the emerging threat from the virus in the quarter, payments rose to a quarterly record to US$275.4bn, with the index of global payouts at a record 196.3 and almost doubled from when the index started in 2009.

Apart from in the US, one-off special dividends were lower year-on-year in most parts of the world, the report found, which held back headline growth rates in the UK, Europe, Asia and elsewhere but were sharply higher in the US.

The impact of coronavirus has seen 36% of UK dividends cut, compared to 31% in the rest of Europe, 16% in Asia Pacific, 8% in Japan, 6% in North America and 5% in emerging markets.

Another 9% of UK dividends are seen as vulnerable to a coronavirus cut, the research found, compares to 14% in North America, 18% in Asia Pacific, 19% in Europe, 32% in Japan and 42% in emerging markets. 

North America has the higher proportion of dividends seen as safe, according to Henderson Janus, at 79%, followed by 66% for Asia Pacific, 60% for Japan, 54% for the UK, 52% for emerging markets and 50% for Europe.

Income inequality: which companies are still paying dividends

“Though the US has experienced a severe coronavirus outbreak and its lockdown is stringent, there has been strong policy stimulus, and as yet no regulatory demands have been made on companies not to pay dividends,” the report said. 

“There is a favourable sector mix (high exposure to technology). In addition, quarterly dividends spread the risk of cancellations, and payout ratios are relatively low (buybacks are popular in the US). All this means that [North American] dividends are likely to be more resilient.

“In Europe, by contrast, though the policy response has been strong, the outbreak and lockdown are severe.”

Bank impact biggest in UK and Europe

With banks having contributed one in every six dollars of the world’s dividends in 2019, the research noted that this important sector and had been forced to cease payments by European regulators and once-per-year dividend payments mean a decision to cut has a big one-off impact. 

“Payout ratios are also relatively high so Europe is likely to be one of the most affected regions as a result.”

From a…



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