Investment

2 Big Tech Dividends That Are Soaring (Not Because Of AI)

3 Mins read

Our favorite tech-sector dividend growers are finally on sale—and our time to “lock in” these fast-growing payouts has arrived.

Our Tech Buying Opportunity: Fully Booted Up

These days, fear surrounds us, and we contrarian income seekers know that times of fear are when we go shopping. That goes double for tech stocks, which tumble when the 10-year rises (and vice versa).

Take last year, when the rate on the “long bond” spiked and high-flying techs, shown in purple below by the performance of the benchmark Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK

XLK
)
hit the deck:

Sure, the AI hype has fueled a nice rebound this year, but this latest spike in the 10-year has given us a nice—and rare—second chance to buy in, washing out many of our faves.

Over the last few weeks, I’ve been saying the 10-year would bump its head on the “4.3% ceiling” and retreat. The fact that it’s blown through that ceiling only means its fall will be that much harder—and our favorite tech-sector dividend payers will rip that much higher in response!

We’ve already started to see that happen, but it’s not too late to lock in historically high payouts (and rapid payout growth) from our favorite big-name techs.

Here’s something else most folks forget when it comes to Big Tech: it’s sitting on a pile of cash rivaling that of just about any sector except banks. The poster child here, of course, is Apple

AAPL
(AAPL),
with its $167-billion hoard. As that cash gets put to work in buybacks, dividends, R&D or, as we’ll see in the two stocks below, acquisitions, we stand to benefit.

Big Tech Dividend No.1: Cisco Systems (CSCO)

Cisco’s networking gear puts it square in the tracks of AI’s rapid growth. But that’s just the headline. Look deeper and you’ll see something equally important: Its ongoing move into software—which, in turn, is driving its shift to a subscription-based model.

That shift will further stabilize Cisco’s revenue, and it’s taking hold nicely, with recurring revenue rising 5% in its 2023 fiscal year, to make up 43% of the total.

The company’s acquisition of Splunk

SPLK
(SPLK),
announced in September, is yet another move in this direction, bringing in Splunk’s subscription-based cybersecurity software and putting Cisco in an even better position to leverage AI.

Cisco can easily afford Splunk, with $26 billion in cash and just $8 billion in long-term debt, a sliver of the company’s $219-billion market cap. Even so, it trades at just 13.3-times forward earnings. The deal won’t jeopardize Cisco’s payout growth, as it’s expected to add to cash flow in the first year. Plus, the dividend—current yield: 2.9%—already makes for a light load, at just 33% of Cisco’s last 12 months of free cash flow (FCF).

And while this payout isn’t growing as fast as it once did, it is a reliable “magnet” on the share price.

And we’ll give management a bit of a pass on payout growth because they’re buying back shares at a solid pace, as shown in the blue line above. And check out the drop in shares outstanding as everything—particularly tech—went into the dumpster in ’22. That’s a sign management knows when its stock is oversold—and when to accelerate its buybacks. That’s the kind of savvy we want.

Big Tech Dividend No. 2: Broadcom

AVGO
(AVGO)

Semiconductor maker Broadcom ticks many of the same boxes as Cisco, starting with gains as AI drives demand for computing power. But there is one key difference: much faster dividend growth.

Let’s rattle through the similarities between these two tech-dividend giants:

  1. No rate worries, thanks to a “fortress” balance sheet: Broadcom’s sitting on $12 billion in cash, and while it does carry $39 billion in debt, that’s just over 10% of its (massive) value as a public company: $373 billion. Peanuts.
  2. A big acquisition: That strong balance sheet leaves Broadcom plenty of room to close its looming $75-billion cash-and-stock purchase of VMware

    VMW
    (VMW)
    . The move will boost Broadcom’s presence in AI and cloud computing. Plus, VMW is profitable, with EPS jumping 34% in the latest quarter and revenue up 2.2%
  3. A safe dividend, at 43% of FCF, this one’s also easy to carry, especially when you consider revenue was up 5% in the last quarter, while EPS jumped 8%.
  4. A potent Dividend Magnet: No question! As I’ve said before, share prices always catch up to dividend growth—something Broadcom’s stock resisted for most of the past decade—till its 1,700% (!) payout growth in that time recently broke the stalemate.

To be sure, that stunning payout and share-price growth have left Broadcom pricier than Cisco, at 21-times forward earnings. So it may not rip quite as high when rates do pull back. But that quadruple-digit dividend growth will build on the 2% yield you’d get on a buy made today in short order. And with Broadcom set to announce its next hike in December, we won’t have to wait long to get started.

Brett Owens is chief investment strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, get your free copy his latest special report: Your Early Retirement Portfolio: Huge Dividends—Every Month—Forever.

Disclosure: none

Read the full article here

Related posts
Investment

Is Magnificent 7 Momentum Setting Investors Up for Disappointment?

1 Mins read
The Magnificent Seven stocks have experienced remarkable earnings and free-cash-flow growth in recent years, all while developing the next generation of technological…
Investment

This fund manager stopped worrying about economics. Now he is outperforming the stock market.

4 Mins read
A change in strategy has helped transform the GoodHaven Fund from a long-term underperformer into an outperformer since the end of 2019….
Investment

After 34 years, Japan’s Nikkei 225 completes a roundtrip

2 Mins read
The Nikkei 225 — an oddly constructed index covering the top 225 Japanese companies — is back at levels not reached since…
Get The Latest News

Subscribe to get the top fintech and
finance news and updates.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *