Incremental Dividend  and Example

Incremental Dividend and Example

An incremental dividend is a series of repeated increases in the dividend a company pays on its common shares. When a company that has regularly increased their dividend all of a sudden stops, that sends a signal to investors that the company is no longer growing or can no longer afford to keep increasing the dividend. An incremental dividend is generally only paid by mature companies, and firms with low dividend payout ratios, that have the cash and earnings to easily increase the dividend amount over time. A company with a high dividend payout already — meaning current dividends represent most of their profits — have little ability to boost the dividend payout unless profits/earnings improve. An incremental dividend is a series of repeated increases in the dividend a company pays on its common shares.

An incremental dividend is when the dividend payout is increased over time.

What is an Incremental Dividend?

An incremental dividend is a series of repeated increases in the dividend a company pays on its common shares. Larger companies with significant cash flow tend to pay incremental dividends as a way to return value to shareholders. Regularly increasing the dividend is also a signal to investors that the company is doing well.

Sometimes, corporate management teams communicate their plans to pay incremental dividends to help attract income-seeking investors. Other times, management teams won’t communicate an incremental dividend explicitly, but investors pick up on the pattern of rising dividends over a certain period of time.

An incremental dividend is when the dividend payout is increased over time.
Mature companies with low dividend payout ratios are more likely to offer incremental dividends.
Regularly increasing dividends is one sign a company is doing well.
A company that regularly increased its dividend and then stops increasing it, or drops it, may spook investors, especially income seeking investors.

How the Incremental Dividend Works

An incremental dividend is generally only paid by mature companies, and firms with low dividend payout ratios, that have the cash and earnings to easily increase the dividend amount over time. Shareholders tend to watch this ratio closely, as it helps to indicate a company’s ability to boost dividends in the future.

A company with a high dividend payout already — meaning current dividends represent most of their profits — have little ability to boost the dividend payout unless profits/earnings improve. On the other hand, a company that pays out on a small portion of their profits in dividends has more room to increase their dividend without negatively affecting cash flow.

Incremental dividends are usually viewed positively by the markets. However, there are times when a company’s earnings are not growing, or shrinking, and a company continues to pay incremental dividends. In these situations, shareholders may worry that profits won’t be sustainable over time, and neither will the incremental dividend. When a company pays dividends it can't afford, investors may view this as a negative since it hurts the company's long-term viability.

Types of Dividends

Many firms pay dividends to shareholders in cash, although some pay in additional shares of stock. The former is generally seen more favorably by investors.

The reason is, stock dividends increase a company’s shares outstanding, and, by doing so, they dilute the value of the shares an investor already holds.

For example, say a company with two million shares outstanding declares a cash dividend of $0.50 per share. An investor holding 100 shares receives $50 ($0.50 x 100 shares). Instead of pocketing that dividend, some investors reinvest it by buying additional shares. Reinvesting dividends typically adds meaningfully to gains an investor might receive from just price appreciation over the long term.

However, say the same investor receives a 5% stock dividend. This means the investor receives 5 additional shares (5% of 100 shares). However, to offer this dividend, the company increases its shares outstanding by 100,000 shares (2,000,000 x 1.05). Because the company now has more shares outstanding that are backed by the same company assets, the value of the existing shares in circulation decreases.

When an Incremental Dividend Ends

When a company that pays incremental dividends stops paying them, even once, it’s sometimes negative for the stock price. The reason is, companies that pay incremental dividends tend to attract a high percentage of income-seeking investors.

When a company that has regularly increased their dividend all of a sudden stops, that sends a signal to investors that the company is no longer growing or can no longer afford to keep increasing the dividend. Investors may jump ship, taking this is a negative, and reinvest those funds in another stock that is still regularly increasing its dividend.

Real-Word Example of an Incremental Dividend

Target Corporation (TGT) is an example of a company with steady growth in its dividend. Going back to 1972 Target has increased the dividend amount every year.

The dividend started out at $0.0021 per quarter in the last quarter of 1967 and all of 1968.

1969, 1970, and 1971 saw an increase to $0.0026 per quarter.

From 1972 onward, the dividend payout has increased every single year up through 2019. In 2020 the company paid out $2.68 in dividends for the year, an average of $0.67 per quarter.

Related terms:

Accumulating Shares

Accumulating shares is a classification of common stock that is given to shareholders of a company in lieu of or in addition to a dividend.  read more

Cash Flow

Cash flow is the net amount of cash and cash equivalents being transferred into and out of a business. read more

Dilution

Dilution occurs when a company issues new stock which results in a decrease of an existing stockholder's ownership percentage of that company. 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 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 Rate

The dividend is the percentage of a security's price paid out as dividend income to investors. read more

Dividend Reinvestment Plan—DRIP

A dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) is an arrangement that allows shareholders to automatically reinvest a stock's cash dividends into additional or fractional shares of the underlying company. It is offered by a public company free or for a nominal fee, though minimum investment amounts may apply. read more

Dividend Signaling

Dividend signaling suggests that a company announcement of an increase in dividend payouts is an indicator of its strong future prospects.  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

Outstanding Shares

Shares outstanding refer to a company's stock currently held by all its shareholders, including share blocks held by institutional investors and restricted shares owned by the company’s insiders. read more