4 High-Yield Dividend Traps to Sell Now

NYSE: NLY | Annaly Capital Management Inc News, Ratings, and Charts

NLY – There are some types of businesses that are always dividend cut landmines like: NLY, AGNC FRO and GMLP.

I review a lot of high-yield investments. You likely are aware that an investment gets priced for a higher-than-typical yield because of the potential or possibility of a dividend rate reduction. The interesting part about a company’s decision to change its dividend is that it is a binary event. Either the dividend is cut, or it will be sustained. The goal as an investor is to find and invest in high-yield stocks that don’t cut the dividends. Dividend reductions are the landmines of income-focused investing strategies.

The pandemic triggered an economic shutdown, and related financial markets crash, has already pushed hundreds of companies with high-yield stocks into dividend cuts. Because share prices are so low, many of these stocks still have very high percentage yields.

You may think it’s safe to get back into the stocks with already-cut dividends. However, for certain types of high-yield businesses, it’s a case of once a landmine dividend stock, always a landmine dividend stock.

Dividend cuts are independent of the company’s stock price and the current yield. Just because a stock has dropped a lot—and the yield is now very high—does not automatically mean the company will cut the dividend rate.

The ability to pay dividends depends on business results and the amount of free cash flow generated by the business. The corporate board of directors determines whether the dividend will be sustained or reduced based on business results and the business future outlook.

Here are some types of businesses that are always dividend cut landmines. And one that, post-pandemic, has the potential to surprise investors with more dividend reductions.

Agency mortgage-backed securities real estate investment trusts (MBS REITs) are companies that own highly leveraged portfolios of U.S. government agency guaranteed mortgage-backed securities. These companies are classified as finance REITs. Not all finance REITs are dividend landmines. You need to look for the code words “agency MBS” and the fact the companies leverage up their equity to six times or more. Here are two popular high-yield finance REITs to avoid.

Annaly Capital Management (NLY)

Annaly Capital Management (NLY) currently yields 14.75%.

This is a stock I get a lot of questions about from my Dividend Hunter readers.

To get the cash flow to pay the big yield, the company reported economic leverage of 6.8 times for the 2020 first quarter. For that quarter, Annaly paid a $0.25 dividend.

Unfortunately, core earnings were just $0.21 per share. In 2012, the Annaly dividend was $0.55 per share. In 2019, it was cut from $0.30 per share down to the current $25 per share. Over the past six years—but before the recent crash—the share price dropped by 41%.

Annaly is a dividend landmine with a reset button.

AGNC Investment Corp. (AGNC)

AGNC Investment Corp. (AGNC) is another agency MBS REIT. It currently yields 11.4%.

For the first quarter, AGNC reported 9.4 times “tangible net book value ‘at-risk’ leverage.” That phrase alone shows how complicated the business model is.

The company reported $0.57 per share in net spread income, against $0.48 paid in dividends. That’s a good thing. The bad thing is, the leveraged agency MBS business model always stops generating enough cash eventually.

The AGNC dividend has been cut four times in the last five years, pulling the share price down with the reductions.

Shipping stocks are another high-yield investing landmine. Ship leasing rates are very volatile, fluctuating wildly with swings in the global economy. When rates are high, the shippers lock in those rates with multi-year contracts, and they pay out big dividends. When the leases expire, renewal lease rates are often much lower, and the dividends get slashed.

Frontline Ltd. (FRO)

Frontline Ltd. (FRO) owns a fleet of 70 crude oil tankers used for floating oil storage.

With crude oil demand destruction, tanker rates have skyrocketed. Frontline, which paid a $0.10 per share dividend in December, and a $0.40 per share dividend in March, has declared a $0.70 dividend payable in June. The current yield based on the latest dividend is over 30%.

Investors may get a few more big dividends from Frontline, but eventually tanker lease rates will come back down—and so will the dividend.

Golar LNG Partners (GMLP)

Golar LNG Partners (GMLP) owns and operates a fleet of LNG carriers and LNG floating and storage regasification units (FSRUs).

The vessels are on long-term contracts, and before the pandemic, Golar paid out almost 100% of free cash flow as a $0.4042 per share dividend.

The yield on Golar before the market crash was 17% to 18%. When the so-called “coronacrisis” took down the energy sector, the Golar management took the opportunity to slash the dividend to $0.02 per share and renegotiate terms with its bondholders.

Common shareholders were left holding the bag.

Want More Great Investing Ideas?

Top Dividend Stock to Own! Download Free Report Today

 


NLY shares rose $0.05 (+0.78%) in after-hours trading Tuesday. Year-to-date, NLY has declined -28.84%, versus a -6.53% rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.


About the Author: Tim Plaehn


Tim is the lead income and dividend investing analyst at Investors Alley. He is the editor for The Dividend Hunter, a popular investment research advisory focusing on high-yield dividend stocks for investors who want a steady and growing income. Prior to joining Investors Alley Tim was a stock broker, financial planner, and F-16 fighter pilot and instructor in the U.S. Air Force. More...


More Resources for the Stocks in this Article

TickerPOWR RatingIndustry RankRank in Industry
NLYGet RatingGet RatingGet Rating
Get RatingGet RatingGet Rating
FROGet RatingGet RatingGet Rating
GMLPGet RatingGet RatingGet Rating

Most Popular Stories on StockNews.com


How Low Could Stocks Go?

The S&P 500 (SPY) is starting to test key support levels for the first time since November 2023 given continuing signs that Fed rate cuts are getting pushed further and further into the future. This begs the question of “how low could stocks go?” 44 year investment veteran Steve Reitmeister does his level best to answer that question including a trading plan and top picks to stay one step ahead of the market. Read on below for the full story...

3 Biotech Stocks to Buy to Power Through April

The biotech sector is primed for growth, fueled by a surge in FDA approvals, anticipated M&A deals, and the integration of AI in drug discovery. So, fundamentally sound biotech stocks Theratechnologies (THTX), Harmony Biosciences (HRMY), and Shionogi & Co. (SGIOY) might be solid buys in this month. Keep reading...

Check out These 3 Internet Stocks for Potential Gains

Amplified internet usage, technological advancements, and a rising digital transformation worldwide have driven the internet industry rapidly. To that end, quality internet stocks Wix.com (WIX), Tripadvisor (TRIP), and Yelp (YELP) could be solid buys now. Read on…

Top 3 Financial Services Stocks With Unstoppable Momentum

The financial services sector is set for solid growth owing to global economic trends, technological advancements making digital services more accessible, and changing consumer preferences.Therefore, investors could consider buying fundamentally strong financial services stocks Broadridge Financial Solutions (BR), Banco Macro (BMA), and Yiren Digital (YRD) as they look well-positioned to continue their momentum. Read more...

Updated 2024 Stock Market Outlook

The bull market continues to rage on with the S&P 500 (SPY) making new highs. That is the past...the question is what does the future hold? That is why 44 year investment veteran Steve Reitmeister provides this updated 2024 Stock Market Outlook to help you carve a path to outperformance the rest of the year. Read on below for the full story...

Read More Stories

More Annaly Capital Management Inc (NLY) News View All

Event/Date Symbol News Detail Start Price End Price Change POWR Rating
Loading, please wait...
View All NLY News