Jun 11, 2021

Cory Diary : Sustainability of Dividend Income

In this post I like to blog about how I try to rise and maintain my conviction in dividend investing. When we talk about dividend investing, the play is about total returns of the stocks. Therefore, DPU + Capital Gain/Loss. What this mean is the measure of shareholder total returns in any of this forms.

Realized gain is actually not so fruitful exercise other than incidental situation to rebalance the portfolio or when there is fundamental change in the company. If one does not have the main mindset of continuing run the dividend business through compounding the portfolio growth with long term skin in the game, this strategy will be painful to your Health. haha. So the first mindset is, we don't realised capital gain or cut loss unless specific condition as mentioned is needed.

Quality Companies come with a price. Reits performance are usually ties to Sponsor, Credibility, Capability and Business. A good sponsor provides support of low funding cost when Reits borrows from the bank. The Reit/Sponsor Credibility is the most important however but as long it satisfies enough returns in a Win-Win situation, investors will be willing to push up prices. Management capability play a big part too. Another key area is the business type. I won't be interested in Ship Business as their depreciation is real and heavy whereas investment in properties are much more robust and can even grow with inflation. 

Yield is tricky. Forward yield is more relevant than current yield when comes to long term investment. It helps to support price and if it doesn't, an opportunity to average down for higher dividend returns in the future with lower cost. Current yield can spikes due to decrease in stock price. So one must do their home work to understand the mechanics on price decrease reasons. If a Reit is sold down without good justification, is a gem to get them. However if we are anticipating consistent poor performance or ticking time bomb ie. First Reit sustainability of contract, high yield can also be a Warning to avoid. When a yield keeps going lower but DPU maintains well, this likely due to increase in stock price. That's mean the Reits are probably doing it right and if this can last over a long time it will look more expensive. There could be situation where the DPU drops with increasing stock price. The Market may feel good about the future but one has to make sure stock price can be sustained.

Business Risk comes in many form. Short Lease, Depreciating Currency, Poor Future Contract, Poor Cycles, High Borrowing Cost, High depreciation, High maintenance cost, High Perpetual Cost, High Gearing, Bad acquisition/Sales, High Taxes, ... . If we feel a specific event could change the dynamics significantly, we may need to re-balance or cut loss. This has nothing to do with whether I still make money from the current investment or not.

Diversification to me helps to mitigate my wrong choice. ie. Retail Reits. For example I use to have CICT mainly. But today FCT is more but I still retain some CICT. In-addition I have MCT on accumulation path for months. Many decision needs not be 1 or 0. Of course to maximize profit, we may have to do that and this are probably for Experts. Am I ? It also depends one's risk appetite. Between counters I may do within sector rebalance as needed with changing market situation. There is also need to look at broader and deeper diversification such as Industrial Reits due to Covid.

This result a Portfolio of Reits where we can play around the allocation with specific needs. If we do this right, we will see compounding growth in Value and sustainable Dividend over many years. After learning for many years, maintaining a dozen stocks of Reits are not really hard because the business usually are not difficult to understand unless one try to be picky say between 1.1 or 1.2 performance differences. And I could be wrong and still be ok and will not be left far behind. Will there be a day we will see a large fall in our portfolio. You Bet ! A 1M size on large crash say 50% drop, is 500k capital loss. A big test on you. Will you Hold, Buy or Sell ?


Thinking ....

Cory
2021-0611

Articles in this Blog is personal take and educational purposes only. Reader should seek their own professional help when making financial decision and be responsible for their decision.

6 comments:

  1. Hi Cory,
    Great post especially on the Biz Risk / Forward Yield and Sponsor or management credibility & quality...not all REITs are created equal, many value traps among the REITs.
    Yup, when your portfolio size increase to a certain amount, one will really need a "strong heart and mind" to see the portfolio value drops by few hundreds K when market corrected by 20-30% like the one in Mar 2020. But that's also indicate that one have successfully accumulated enough or sizable portfolio for retirement ....good problem though :D, but will need to have conviction and believe in Mr. Market that it will rebound and recover eventually, if the company one invested have strong fundamental.
    Cheers !! :D



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    1. Guts x 3 when both are retired with a family ! I need a bigger portfolio !! :)

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  2. Hi, Cory & STE
    100% agree. For long term REITS investors looking for dependable incomes, QUALITY (underlying assets, management, sponsors, financial strength) should be the prime consideration, not immediate yield. QUALITY REITS will see their DPUs grow over time, capital appreciation is bonus. Bought/accumulated Parkway/MLT/KDC since IPO, with present yields of 6%/8.5%/7.5% on (average) cost. i.e., over time, QUALITY REITS will turn into investment grade corporate bonds with yields of junk bonds. On drop in portfolio value in bad market cycles, may console ourselves that no asset class (or investors, even for the most successful ones) is free from the erratic temperament of Mr. Market. During the 1997 property downturn triggered by AFC, my properties lost almost 7 figures in market values. Thankfully managed to hold on and property market has since recovered and moved even higher.

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    1. 7 Figures Loss can be quite unnerving but then unlike stock which may not return, property is there forever. If the property is still generating rental income, I will likely be ok ! Did the bank knock on your door that time ?

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  3. Thankfully no because of relatively low loan/value ratio. I was very lucky in buying my matrimonial home, a landed property, in 1987 at fire sale price when Singapore experienced its first recession after independence. Sold the property with $1 mil gain in 1996 when property was at a peak (on hind sight!). Used the proceed for subsequent properties purchases. Sold high and bought high! not savvy enough to keep the cash & wait for the next property crush! similar dilemma faced by equity investors (is this the market peak?).

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    1. We are still in recovery phase from Covid so don't think so we are anywhere near peak. If the gov removes the curb the prices will likely go up very high as lack of investment opportunity with the cash abundance from low rates which we have for years even before covid and then the covid packages sustaining the businesses. As for the stock market, itcan be quite volatile imo due to the printing to save the economy or to be exact to minimize job loss. Some of those companies in the index is old economy especially the O&G. Telco imo is bread and butter of the population, so heyday of Singtel is over as they will not be allowed to price high in their service. We are seeing growing reits of property related into the index. The STI is like deadwood if not due to the banks which again drive the market recovery of the index. So i gues if the market is to crash, the bank has to led the way. Will they survive the Digital Banking Era ?

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