
Forward Dividend Yield
A forward dividend yield is an estimation of a year's dividend expressed as a percentage of the current stock price. The opposite of a forward dividend yield is a trailing dividend yield, which shows a company's actual dividend payments relative to its share price over the previous 12 months. An additional form of dividend yield is the indicated yield or the dividend yield that one share of stock would return, based on its current indicated dividend. Indicated Yield \= ( MRD ) × ( \# of DPEY ) Stock Price where: MRD \= Most recent dividend \\begin{aligned}&\\text{Indicated Yield}=\\frac{(\\text{MRD})\\times(\\#\\text{ of DPEY})}{\\text{Stock Price}}\\\\&\\textbf{where:}\\\\&\\text{MRD}=\\text{Most recent dividend}\\\\&\\text{DPEY}=\\text{Dividend payments each year}\\end{aligned} Indicated Yield\=Stock Price(MRD)×(# of DPEY)where:MRD\=Most recent dividend For example, if a stock trading at $100 has a most recent quarterly dividend of $0.50, the indicated yield would be: Indicated Yield of Stock ABC \= $ 0 . 5 0 × 4 $ 1 0 0 \= 2 % . Common types of dividend policies include the stable dividend policy, in which the company issues dividends when earnings are up or down. The goal of a stable dividend policy is to align with the firm’s goal for long-term growth instead of its quarterly earnings volatility.

What is a Forward Dividend Yield?
A forward dividend yield is an estimation of a year's dividend expressed as a percentage of the current stock price. The year's projected dividend is measured by taking a stock's most recent actual dividend payment and annualizing it. The forward dividend yield is calculated by dividing a year's worth of future dividend payments by a stock's current share price.



Understanding Forward Dividend Yields
For example, if a company pays a Q1 dividend of 25 cents, and you assume the company's dividend will be consistent, the firm will be expected to pay $1.00 in dividends over the course of the year. If the stock price is $10, the forward dividend yield is 10%.
The opposite of a forward dividend yield is a trailing dividend yield, which shows a company's actual dividend payments relative to its share price over the previous 12 months. When future dividend payments are not predictable, the trailing dividend yield can be one way to measure value. When future dividend payments are predictable or have been announced, the forward dividend yield is a more accurate tool.
An additional form of dividend yield is the indicated yield or the dividend yield that one share of stock would return, based on its current indicated dividend. To calculate indicated yield, multiply the most recent dividend issued by the number of annual dividend payments (the indicated dividend). Divide the product by the most current share price.
Indicated Yield = ( MRD ) × ( # of DPEY ) Stock Price where: MRD = Most recent dividend \begin{aligned}&\text{Indicated Yield}=\frac{(\text{MRD})\times(\#\text{ of DPEY})}{\text{Stock Price}}\\&\textbf{where:}\\&\text{MRD}=\text{Most recent dividend}\\&\text{DPEY}=\text{Dividend payments each year}\end{aligned} Indicated Yield=Stock Price(MRD)×(# of DPEY)where:MRD=Most recent dividend
For example, if a stock trading at $100 has a most recent quarterly dividend of $0.50, the indicated yield would be:
Indicated Yield of Stock ABC = $ 0 . 5 0 × 4 $ 1 0 0 = 2 % . \text{Indicated Yield of Stock ABC}=\frac{\$0.50\times4}{\$100}=2\%. Indicated Yield of Stock ABC=$100$0.50×4=2%.
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Forward Dividend Yields and Corporate Dividend Policy
A company’s board of directors determines the dividend policy of the company. In general, more mature and established companies issue dividends, while younger, rapidly growing firms often choose to put any excess profits back into the company for research, development, and expansion purposes. Common types of dividend policies include the stable dividend policy, in which the company issues dividends when earnings are up or down.
The goal of a stable dividend policy is to align with the firm’s goal for long-term growth instead of its quarterly earnings volatility. With a constant dividend policy, a company issues a dividend each year, based on a percentage of the company's earnings. With constant dividends, investors experience the full volatility of company earnings. Finally, with a residual dividend policy a company pays out any earnings after it pays for its own capital expenditures and working capital needs.
Related terms:
Annualize
Annualizing a number means converting a short-term calculation or rate into an annual rate. read more
Cash Dividend
A cash dividend is a distribution paid to stockholders as part of the corporation's current earnings or accumulated profits and guides the investment strategy for many investors. read more
Dividend Aristocrat
A dividend aristocrat is a company that not only pays a dividend consistently but continuously increases the size of its payouts to shareholders. read more
Dividend
A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by the company's board of directors. read more
Dividend Frequency
Dividend frequency is how often a dividend is paid by an individual stock or fund. read more
Dividend Growth Rate
The dividend growth rate is the annualized percentage rate of growth of a particular stock's dividend over time. read more
Dividend Payout Ratio
The dividend payout ratio is the measure of dividends paid out to shareholders relative to the company's net income. read more
Dividend Policy
Dividend policy structures the dividend payout a company distributes to its shareholders. Stable, constant, and residual are three dividend policies. read more
Dividend Rate
The dividend is the percentage of a security's price paid out as dividend income to investors. read more
Dividend Yield
The dividend yield is a financial ratio that shows how much a company pays out in dividends each year relative to its stock price. read more