Global Dividends Outcome ‘Worst Since Global Financial Crisis’

By | August 24, 2020

The coronavirus crisis will see the world’s biggest firms slash dividend payouts between 17%-23% this year or what could be as much $400 billion, a new report has shown, although sectors such as tech are fighting the trend.

Global dividend payments plunged $108 billion to $382 billion in the second quarter of the year, fund manager Janus Henderson has calculated, equating to a 22% year-on-year drop which will be the worst since at least 2009.

All regions saw lower payouts except North America, where Canadian payments proved to be resilient. Worldwide, 27% of firms cut their dividends, while worst affected Europe saw more than half do so and two thirds of those cancel them outright.

Excerpt from JANUS HENDERSON GLOBAL DIVIDEND INDEX “Communications (which include telecoms) and healthcare dividends were relatively unaffected by the crisis, with dividends up 1.8% and 0.1% respectively on an underlying basis. All the other industry groupings saw lower payouts. Financials took the biggest hit in value terms, dropping by $54bn or two fifths. UK and European financial dividends, which have been subjected to the strictest regulatory prohibitions, are concentrated in the second quarter, so the decline is exacerbated by this seasonal pattern. Elsewhere, with consumers the world over locked down in the second quarter and much less able to spend, consumer discretionary companies took action on dividends – they almost halved year-on-year. Industrials shed one third, but most other industry groups saw single-digit declines.”

“2020 will see the worst outcome for global dividends since the global financial crisis,” Janus Henderson said in a report published on Monday.

“We now expect headline global dividends to fall 17% in a best-case scenario, paying $1.18 trillion… Our worst-case scenario could see payouts drop 23% to $1.10 trillion.”

A break down of the various sectors showed some big differences too.

Banks and other financial firms that have been ordered by the European Central Bank to stop paying dividends accounted for half of the 45% reduction in Europe’s Q2 dividend drop to $77 billion.

Miners and oil firms were hit badly by the broad slump in commodity prices and consumer discretionary companies saw their operations hard hit by government lockdowns too, resulting in much lower payments.

In contrast, tech and telecoms and healthcare firms’ dividends were relatively unaffected, with dividends up 1.8% and 0.1% respectively on an underlying basis.

That big tech resilience has also helped Microsoft and Apple power their way into the top ten of world dividend payers for the first time this year. That list is still topped by Nestle.

“Dividend trends are reflecting the trends in society and the stock market at the moment,” said Janus Henderson’s head of global equity income, Ben Lofthouse.

“Probably we are going to see increases from parts of the tech sector,” he added. “There are a lot of very strong balance sheets in that area.”

Going forward, he said, some key factors will determine how strong the recovery in dividends will be.

The most obvious is the path of the coronavirus, but there is also what U.S. firms do later this year and whether Europe’s banks get the green light early next year to restart their payments.

“The big question for the U.S. is what will happen in the fourth quarter. If many companies make significant cuts to their dividends, payouts will be fixed at a lower level until towards the end of 2021.”

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.