Tag Archives: retirement portfolio

U.S. Growth stocks: You’d better be Seabiscuit

This is Part 2 of a two-part blog series on the prospects for Growth and Value Stocks.

Read Part 1 Growth Stocks: Where’s the Beef?

By Jeff Weniger, CFA, WisdomTree Investments

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

When your starting point is a 1.4% dividend yield,1as is the case with the S&P 500 Growth Index, the group of stocks that make up the basket need to have long-term dividend growth that performs like Seabiscuit, the super horse. No tripping out of the gate or getting bumped in the stretch.

Latching on to the concepts in my white paper, Dividend Growth’s Drivers: Picking Apart Quality, we present figure 1, which shows the interrelationship between the percentage of earnings that are retained (as opposed to paid out as dividends) and the return on equity (ROE), which is net income as a percentage of shareholders’ equity.

This relationship is thedriver of dividend growth, and as the years go on, concepts like figure 1 have become core tenets of second-decade WisdomTree.

Figure 1: The Critical Equation

The Critical Equation

Figure 2 uses the critical equation to calculate long-term dividend growth at prevailing profitability levels.

As it stands, the S&P 500 Growth Index’s 23.2% ROE implies long-term dividend growth of 16.8%. That could happen, yes. Anything canhappen. But here’s a better idea: expect downward revisions instead.

Figure 2: Implied Dividend Growth Estimate 

Implied Dividend Growth Estimate

After all, look at the historic record in figure 3. There isn’t a single five-year period that had growth stocks’ earnings running forward at a 16.8% clip, not even in the roaring 1990s. In contrast, value stocks’ implied dividend growth is on planet Earth. 

Figure 3: Dividend Growth Rate, 5-Year Periods, 1995–Present 

Dividend Growth Rate 5Year Periods 1995Present

Does anything jump out in figure 3? Look at the dividend growth experience of growth and value from 2010 to 2015 and from 2015 to the present.

Those growth stocks start to look less like Seabiscuit and more like also-rans if recent years are any indication. Granted, value indexes are dominated by banks, and the period from 2010 to 2018 was characterized by the benefit of their reinstated dividends. Nevertheless, if growth stocks were only able to increase their dividends at a high single-digit rate during this period of irrepressible economic expansion, what happens if recession hits? Let someone else pay 22 times earnings to find out. 

Slow and Boring? Better than Growing Out of 1%

The S&P 500 Value Index has a dividend yield that is about double that of the S&P 500 Growth Index (2.7% vs. 1.4%). This kind of gap makes it nearly impossible for the latter index to ever grow out of its valuation.

If U.S. growth could not differentiate its … ahem … dividend growth relative to value from 2010 to 2018, what makes anyone think the next several years will be different? For growth stock skeptics, the WisdomTree Fund that hits value is the WisdomTree U.S. High Dividend Index ETF (HID/HID.B)

It retains 38% of its earnings, pays out the other 62% as dividends and has an ROE of 13.5%. That ROE is satisfactory enough. Using the “critical equation,” it has long-term implied dividend growth of 5.1%, which is less than the levels of the S&P 500 Growth Index. But when the starting point is a 1.4% forward dividend yield, companies that populate indexes like the S&P 500 Growth Index would have to run up their dividends at a 15% or 20% annual pace for a long time before the math even thinks about shifting in their favour.2

For investors who do not want to commit to value because they keep getting burned, a fund like the WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Index ETF (DGR/DGR.B), which tracks the WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Index CAD, seeks to target companies that rank well on our ROE x earnings retention framework. 

Critically, its dividend weighting methodology also checks valuations at the door. That gives it a starting dividend yield of 2.7%, about 130 bps more than the S&P 500 Growth Index. It also has an explicit screen for ROE and return on assets (ROA). Its 15.8x forward earnings multiple is 3.3 multiple points below the S&P 500 Growth Index.

Over the next 5 or 10 years, we’ll take DGR.B or HID.B over S&P 500 Growth Index. This is where the rubber meets the road, when the cap-weighted U.S. large-cap growth indexes start to be priced like they’re Seabiscuit, when in reality they’re an underlay.

1Sources: WisdomTree, Bloomberg, as of 11/15/18.

2Sources: WisdomTree, Bloomberg. Unless otherwise stated, all data in this blog as of 11/15/18.    


Jeff Weniger, CFA serves as Asset Allocation Strategist at WisdomTree. Jeff has a background in fundamental, economic and behavioral analysis for strategic and tactical asset allocation. Prior to joining WisdomTree, he was Director, Senior Strategist with BMO from 2006 to 2017, serving on the Asset Allocation Committee and co-managing the firm’s ETF model portfolios. Jeff has a B.S. in Finance from the University of Florida and an MBA from Notre Dame. He is a CFA charter holder and an active member of the CFA Society of Chicago and the CFA Institute since 2006. He has appeared in various financial publications such as Barron’s and the Wall Street Journal and makes regular appearances on Canada’s Business News Network (BNN) and Wharton Business Radio.

How to build a sound and profitable Retirement portfolio

By Patrick McKeough, TSINetwork.ca

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

To decide if an investment belongs in your portfolio for retirement, you need to take a close look at its attributes or features. But, just as important, you need a close look at how well the investment suits your needs. A superficial look can steer you in the wrong direction.

From time to time, for instance, investors say “Now that I’m retired, I can’t invest in stocks any more. I can’t risk a 30% to 40% drop in the value of my portfolio.” But these same investors may buy annuities without considering the fact that annuity rates are related to bond yields. Both are at historically low levels. A revival of inflation could do extraordinary damage to the purchasing power you get from the fixed returns on bonds or annuities.

Retirement planning and four key factors to consider when investing for retirement

Retirement planning is the process of setting retirement goals, estimating the income needed to meet those goals and assessing your potential sources of retirement income. These days, more investors suffer from what you might call “pre-retirement financial stress syndrome.” That’s the malady that strikes when it dawns on you that you don’t have enough money saved to be able to earn the retirement income stream you were banking on. The best way to overcome this is with sound investing.

Additionally, here are four key factors to consider for retirement saving:

  • How much you expect to save prior to retirement;
  • The return you expect on your savings;
  • How much of that return you’ll have left after taxes;
  • How much retirement income you’ll need once you’ve left the workforce.

Should you consider investment products in your portfolio for retirement?

The financial industry has created income-producing investment products to cater to investors who are wary of stock-market uncertainty. These products can provide steady income that’s higher than bond interest, or dividend yields from stocks. However, these products are almost always subject to hidden fees and risks that continually drain your capital, or leave it vulnerable to unexpected losses.

Successful investors understand that occasional market plunges are normal and unavoidable. A drop of 30% to 40% in stock prices is rare. But after the plunge ends, stocks bounce back and eventually recover. Meanwhile, if you follow our Successful Investor approach, you’ll still have dividend income. What’s more, you don’t need to (and probably won’t) sell at the low in prices.

You can maintain reserves for your cash flow needs by selling some stocks every year, during times of high and low prices.

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