Posts Tagged ‘dividend stocks’

Divided Stock Idea Of The Week: Philip Morris International (PM)

Monday, November 12th, 2012
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Our weekly dividend idea is the global cigarettes and tobacco stock Philip Morris International (PM); the leading tobacco stock has 3.98% yield and 7.7% upside potential.

Philip Morris International (PM) is a leading international tobacco company, encompassing eight of the world’s top 15 international brands which includes Marlboro, the number one cigarette brand worldwide. PM has become the world’s leading international tobacco company and the third most profitable international consumer goods company. While US sales revenues have been in decline as its parent company, Altria Group, struggles to cope with higher state tobacco tariffs and the tobacco industry’s negative image in the US, international sales continue to grow for PM.

Philip Morris International’s subsidiaries and affiliates and their licensees are engaged in the manufacture and sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products in markets outside of the US. Its products are sold in approximately 180 countries. The company divides its markets into four geographic segments: The European Union (EU) region, the Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa (EEMA) region, the Asia region and the Latin America and Canada region.

Philip Morris International is a buy for all dividend growth investors. The company increased dividends over a period of five consecutive years with a double-digit rate. Dividends grew faster than the earnings per share due to the fact that the company stock up its payout ratio to a current value of 63%. After the spin-off from Altria, the company was nearly debt-free and raised its loans to banks and other creditors to a current value of $22.4 billion. In relation to the strong operating cash flow, measured by an EBITDA of $14.58 billion, the leverage seems to be ok for a consumer goods company with a high degree of addictiveness. The valuations are not cheap especially if you look at the disappointing third quarter figures, the slowing growth of Europe and the reinforcing legal restrictions.

On Sept. 12, 2012 PM increased its dividend by 10.4% to $0.85 quarter dividend or $3.40 full year dividend. Analysts from Morningstar estimated the fair value of the company at $92 which include a current upside potential of 7.70%. Philip Morris International is also a bet on China. Nearly half of Philip Morris International’s sales were generated in Asia, the strongest growth region in the world.

Here is a snapshot of Philip Morris International:

Philip Morris International (PM) has a market capitalization of $142.7 billion. The company employs 78,100 people, generates revenue of $76.4 billion and has a net income of $8.9 billion. The firm’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) amounts to $14.3 billon. The EBITDA margin is 18.76 percent (the operating margin is 17.46 percent and the net profit margin is 11.63 percent).

Financial Analysis: The total debt represents 52.26 percent of the company’s assets and the total debt in relation to the equity amounts to 8,098.25 percent. Due to the financial situation, a return on equity of 457.4 percent was realized. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $5. Last fiscal year, the company paid $2.82 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Market Valuation: Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 17.07, the P/S ratio is 1.87 and the P/B ratio is 643.79. The dividend yield amounts to 3.98 percent and the beta ratio has a value of 0.86.

These are the main big competitors at the stock market:

British American Tobacco (BTI) has a market capitalization of $98.53 billion. The company generates revenue of $24.473 billion and has a net income of $5.363 billion. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $8.3 billion. The EBITDA margin is 34.02 percent (the operating margin is 30.48% and the net profit margin is 21.92%).

The total debt represents 37.89 percent of the company’s assets and the total debt in relation to the equity amounts to 125.82 percent. Last fiscal year, a return on equity of 35.63 percent was realized. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $5.10. Last fiscal year, the company paid $4.02 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 19.95, the P/S ratio is 4.04 and the P/B ratio is 7.71. The dividend yield is 4.15 percent. The beta ratio is 0.60.

Altria Group (MO) has a market capitalization of $63.75 billion. The company generates revenue of $23.8 billion and has a net income of $3.4 billion. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $6.3 billion. The EBITDA margin is 26.56 percent (the operating margin is 25.5 percent and the net profit margin is 14.26 percent).

The total debt represents 37.04 percent of the company’s assets and the total debt in relation to the equity amounts to 371.98 percent. Last fiscal year, a return on equity of 76.13 percent was realized. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $1.92. Last fiscal year, the company paid $1.58 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 16.4, the P/S is 2.68 and the P/B ratio is 17.49. The dividend yield is 5.59 percent. The beta ratio is 0.41.

Imperial Tobacco (ITYBY) has a market capitalization of $38.09 billion. The company generates revenue of $45.4 billion and has a net income of $1.1 billion. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $5.2 billion. The EBITDA margin is 11.48 percent (the operating margin is 5.31 percent and the net profit margin is 2.45 percent).

The total debt represents 34.69 percent of the company’s assets and the total debt in relation to the equity amounts to 158.86 percent. Last fiscal year, a return on equity of 9.91 percent was realized. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $2.15. Last fiscal year, the company paid $3.36 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 35.8, the P/S ratio is 0.85 and the P/B ratio is 4.06. The dividend yield is 4.03 percent. The beta ratio is 0.74.

Reynolds American (RAI) has a market capitalization of $23.13 billion. The company generates revenue of $8.5 billion and has a net income of $1.4 billion. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $2.5 billion. The EBITDA margin is 29.7 percent (the operating margin is 28.09 percent and the net profit margin is 16.46 percent).

The total debt represents 22.54 percent of the company’s assets and the total debt in relation to the equity amounts to 58.60 percent. Last fiscal year, a return on equity of 22.04 percent was realized. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $2.64. Last fiscal year, the company paid $2.15 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 15.67, P/S ratio is 2.71 and the P/B ratio 3.81. The dividend yield is 5.7 percent. The beta ratio is 0.58.

Lorillard (LO) has a market capitalization of $14.57 billion. The company generates revenue of $6.5 billion and has a net income of $1.1 billion. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $1.9 billion. The EBITDA margin is 29.83 percent (the operating margin is 29.26 percent and the net profit margin 17.26 percent).

Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $8.35. Last fiscal year, the company paid $5.20 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

These are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 13.48 and the P/S ratio is 2.25. The dividend yield is 5.51 percent. The beta ratio is 0.43.

Vector Group (VGR) has a market capitalization of $1.41 billion. The company generates revenue of $1.1 billion and has a net income of $75.02 million. The firm’s EBITDA amounts to $152.71 million. The EBITDA margin is 13.47 percent (the operating margin is 12.54 percent and the net profit margin is 6.62 percent).

The total debt represents 58.66 percent of the company’s assets. Twelve trailing months earnings per share reached a value of $0.25. Last fiscal year, the company paid $1.47 in the form of dividends to shareholders.

Here are the price ratios of the company: The P/E ratio is 63.95 and the P/S ratio is 1.24. The dividend yield is 9.44 percent. The beta ratio is 0.43.

Before buying or selling a security, you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion.


5 Stocks With Double-Digit Yields

Sunday, July 1st, 2012
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If you’re counting on fixed-income investments to produce steady revenue streams coming in the door, then you can forget about the government. Treasury bills and U.S. bonds offer some of the lowest payouts in memory, and if Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has his way, that will be the case for the next several years, as well. He wants to keep rates very low to help the economy get up off of the mat.

You could turn to the corporate bonds offered up by blue-chip stocks. They’re quite safe, and typically offer yields in the 3 percent to 6 percent range. But for some investors, that’s not enough, especially when you can find investments that yield 10 percent or more.

Of course, such a high-yielding investment should raise your eyebrows. If it were a risk-free rock-solid yield, then many investors would have already bought them, which would effectively push down the yield back into the single digits.
Still, you need not avoid the group of ultra high-yielders completely. Some of these high-yielders have built up a decent track record, and though they made need to eventually reduce their payouts, the yields could still remain quite respectable.

Here are five double-digit yielders for you to consider.

Two Harbors: 15.6% yield

Real estate investment trust Two Harbors trades residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) , which are bundles of both prime and subprime loans. To help deliver high yields, the company uses borrowed funds to magnify returns on equity.

Since most of the income is paid out in the form of dividends, this stock doesn’t move very much: It has traded between $8.50 and $10.50 for the past two years. Yet investors in this stock mainly care about the yield, which is currently 15 percent.

Of course, exposure to both RMBS and the company’s own debt is likely too scary for some investors. And since this company began operations after the mortgage meltdown of 2008, there’s a limited track record. How would Two Harbors fare if mortgages collapsed again? Probably not very well. Still, the odds of that happening appear less likely with each passing quarter, as the housing market starts to stabilize.

However, an outright collapse of the stock market isn’t the real risk. Instead, it’s that the housing market will start to get healthier, and more investors will be comfortable buying up RMBS, pushing their yields down. As profit spreads tighten, Two Harbors will simply make less, and the dividend may fall as low as $1 a share. Still, that equates to an almost 10 percent yield at current prices.

As of the most recently reported quarter, Two Harbors was one of Appaloosa Management’s holdings.

Chesapeake Granite Wash Trust: 13.7% yield

Chesapeake Energy’s CEO Aubrey McClendon is too clever by half. He’s spent the past few years buying and selling oil-and-gas-related assets and now has put the company’s stock at risk. Chesapeake’s base of assets is formidable, but the company’s near-term debt obligations are even more so.

One of McClendon’s balance sheet tricks was to sell off the profit stream from some of its energy fields in the form of the Chesapeake Granite Wash Trust in late 2011 (the company owns three-fifths and the public owns the rest). The $19 initial public offering initially ran to $30 in March, 2012, but is now down below $20, creating an eye-popping dividend yield. Much of the blame goes to the sharp slump in natural gas prices, which threaten to impede cash flows — and Chesapeake Granite Wash’s dividend.

Yet investors should know that the parent company, Chesapeake Energy, will have to forego the rights to a share in the cash flow if the cash flow dips. Still, cash flow has been so sharply reduced that Chesapeake had to cut the quarterly dividend to 66 cents a share, below the 74 cents a share that many investors had been expecting.

Right now, there is some debate about whether the dividend reduction was just a one-time measure, or the start of a trend. If you’re a far-sighted investor, it doesn’t matter. Payouts may fall even further, pushing this yield into the high single-digits, but when oil and gas prices rebound (as they invariably do), the payouts will rise again.

More to the point, that sub-$20 stock price won’t last. An eventual move back to the $30 level seen a few months ago implies 50 percent upside, plus that eventually restored robust payout.

Whiting USA Trust: 16.3% yield

Whiting USA Trust is the income-sharing arm of Whiting Petroleum. The company receives royalties related to sales of oil and natural gas on revenue from oil and natural gas producing properties.

If you thought there’s a catch for such a high-yield, you’re right. The properties from which the trust earns royalties are depleting assets. The trust terminates when 9.11 million barrels of oil equivalent have been produced and sold from the properties. Thus far, a little more than half of that target has been met, and the trust’s sponsors anticipate a 10 percent annual decline in the payout until the oil fields’ quota is met, perhaps in 2016 or 2017.

Annaly Capital Management: 12.9% yield

Annaly Capital Management is similar to Two Harbors, which was discussed earlier. A key distinction is that it has a much longer track record — and it’s pretty impressive — which may account for the slightly lower yield: Investors may see this as a somewhat safer play thanks to management’s track record.

Annaly has generated positive free cash flow in every year of its existence, including the distressing years of 2008 and 2009. The annual dividend now appears stuck in the $2.50 a share range and is likely to stay in that area as long as interest rates (and hence the company’s borrowing costs) stay low.

Cohen & Steers Global Income Builder: 11% yield

Mutual fund Cohen & Steers Global Income Builder employs a very unusual strategy — but it works. The fund invests in real estate investment trusts, master limited partnerships, and utilities. The twist: The fund buys up stocks, but also uses options strategies such as covered calls to produce income.


Equities With Dividends Over 10%

Friday, September 16th, 2011
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Dividend paying stocks with yields above 10% are unusual. Fortunately, there are many Closed-End Funds (CEFs) trading at a discount to net asset value (NAV) with dividends exceeding 10%.

Below is a table of 30 CEFs with dividend payouts exceeding 10%, which trade at a discount, and have expense ratios below 2.0%…

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10 Top Dividend Stocks for 2011

Saturday, January 1st, 2011
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By Miriam Reimer

Dividend activity has picked up in recent months as companies begin to regain some sense of stability in the state of the economy, and visibility of future earnings growth. The iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend(DVY), an exchange-traded fund that tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Select Dividend Index, is up around 14% in 2010. The WisdomTree LargeCap Dividend Fund(DLN) ETF is up nearly 12% this year.

Over the last 36 years, dividend stocks outperformed the rest of the S&P 500 by 2.5% annually, and they outperformed nonpayers by nearly 8% every year, all while paying out cash to their shareholders, according to a study from National Data Research.

Dividend investing is “a sustainable strategy that will be a key driver for performance and total return in 2011,” said Lawrence Glazer, Managing Partner with Mayflower Advisors, in a recent appearance on CNBC. Glazer encouraged investors to reconsider top dividend-paying “Dogs of the Dow” such as Verizon(VZ), Johnson & Johnson(JNJ), Merck(MRK) and Kraft Foods(KFT), blue chips that have offered decades of dividend increases and sustainable payouts, many with stronger yields than 10-year treasury notes.

Verizon, which recently increased its quarterly dividend by 2.6% to 48.75 cents per share, offers an annualized dividend yield of around 5.51%; Johnson & Johnson 3.47%, Merck 4.18% and Kraft 3.64%.

Glazer also tapped the iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend and iShares Dow Jones International Select Dividend Index Fund(IDV) ETFs as deserving of consideration for a sound investment strategy that includes diversification plus additional tax efficiency. The DVY yields around 3.4%; the IDV around 4.3%.

Here then is a breakdown of 10 dividend stocks increasing their shareholder payouts in recent weeks, ranked by average daily volume.

Pfizer(PFE_)

Company Profile: New York City-based Pfizer is a research-based global pharmaceutical company which discovers, develops, manufactures and markets prescription medicines for humans and animals.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average component said recently that its board approved an 11.1% increase of its quarterly cash dividend to 20 cents a share from 18 cents.

>>Pfizer Boosts Quarterly Dividend by 11%

Pfizer said the dividend is payable on March 1, 2011 to shareholders of record on Feb. 4.

The increased dividend will bring Pfizer’s annualized yield to around 4.5% based on current share prices.

In Jim Cramer’s annual analysis of Dow stocks and 2011 predictions he said this of Pfizer: “You can change the CEO, you can buy another company, but you can’t buy growth and Pfizer doesn’t have it. We’ve got a nice yield and that’s going to buoy the stock, or at least keep it from going down much lower. But headway? Way too much off-patent exposure. They don’t call it a cliff for nothing. The growth is so minuscule and the multiple will follow it down, despite the best efforts of a new CEO, who surely has to be better than the last one. I see the stock at $16 next year and it will, again, not be the Dow stock to own.”

Pfizer is just one of two Dow stocks that hold value-focused Morningstar’s highest five-star rating. The research firm says Pfizer’s stock could rise 51% to $26 as fundamentals improve.

Pfizer’s stock fell more than 5% over the past year despite being a consensus value pick on both the buy- and sell-side. It is the largest global drug company, having acquired Wyeth in October 2009. Pfizer’s size, with 2009 revenue of $70 billion and a market value of $139 billion, affords it economies of scale. It has a large portfolio of patented drugs, providing what Morningstar refers to as a “wide economic moat,” or sustainable competitive advantages.

AT&T (T_)

Company Profile: AT&T is a Dallas-based holding company whose subsidiaries and affiliates provide wireless and wireline telecommunications services and equipment as well as directory advertising and publishing services in the United States and internationally.

The Dow component increased its quarterly cash dividend by 2.4% to 43 cents per share, from 42 cents, and concurrently announced a 300 million share repurchase authorization. The authorization represented about 5% of all outstanding shares and had no expiration date.

The higher dividend will be paid on Feb. 1, 2011 to shareholders of record on Jan. 7, bringing AT&T’s yield to around 5.9%.

In Jim Cramer’s annual analysis of Dow stocks and 2011 predictions, he said this of AT&T: “This one has had a huge move already and will be losing exclusive selling rights for [Apple's(AAPL_)] iPhone to Verizon. That’s going to freeze the market and cause the company’s growth rate to slip a tad, maybe to below 6%. If that happens the $2.50 estimates might come down, but just a few pennies. I worry more though that it will finally break its linkage with Verizon and get a tad less of a multiple. It will be bailed out by its bountiful yield but I don’t see the company trading above $32 given the rate of rate of change upward and a small dividend boost. Still worth owning for the combined return however.”

On Dec. 20 AT&T beefed up its 4G network plans with a $1.92 billion purchase of air waves from Qualcomm (QCOM_). The deal will give Ma Bell the 700-megahertz radio spectrum in the D and E block that Qualcomm acquired as part of its mobile TV effort called Flo TV. But having found few customers, Qualcomm says it will shut down Flo TV in March.

AT&T is expected to use the additional radio waves, which were originally set aside for UHF TV signals, as part of its national 4G wireless expansion plan.

Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY)

Company Profile: Bristol-Myers Squibb is a New York City-based global biopharmaceutical company, which is engaged in the discovery, development, licensing, manufacturing, marketing, distribution and sale of pharmaceutical products on a global basis.

Bristol-Myers Squibb joined the parade of big names boosting their dividends in recent weeks, announcing a 3.1% increase to its quarterly payout.

The pharmaceutical giant, whose products include blood thinner Plavix and cancer drug Erbitux, said its board approved a dividend of 33 cents a share on its common stock, starting in the first quarter of fiscal 2011. The dividend will be payable on Feb. 1 to shareholders of record on Jan. 7.

That brings Bristol-Myers Squibb’s dividend yield to around 4.98%.

Bristol-Myers said the quarterly dividend implies a total payout of $1.32 a share for fiscal 2011, although the dividend will be subject to quarterly review by the board.

Bristol-Myers had 1.7 billion shares in the third quarter of 2010, compared with 2 billion shares outstanding in the year-earlier quarter, representing a 12.3% reduction. Stock buybacks by S&P 500 companies increased 128% in the third quarter. For some S&P 500 stocks, a fourth-quarter earnings boost could be the byproduct of the buyback bonanza.


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Monsanto (MON)

Company Profile: Monsanto is a St. Louis, Mo.-based global provider of agricultural products for farmers. Its seeds, biotechnology trait products, and herbicides are designed to help farmers improve productivity, reduce the costs of farming and produce better foods — or, according to the company’s detractors, grow and maintain a monopoly for Monsanto.

Monsanto increased its dividend by 5.7% to 28 cents per share. It will be paid on Jan. 28, 2011, to shareowners of record on Jan. 7, bringing Monsanto’s yield to around 1.7%.

Monsanto shares rallied in the second half of December following a favorable outlook at the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Industries Conference, and news that the USDA had completed an environmental impact study on the company’s biotech alfalfa offering.

Monsanto is one of the biggest players in the global agrichemical business, providing proprietary brands of seeds and herbicides to farmers. Fueling that business is a well-funded research and development group that’s been leading the charge toward creating biotechnology trait packages for crops that increase yields and make them impervious to industrial herbicides used to kill nearby weeds. Already, the firm has a major hold on the U.S. agricultural industry, and inroads are being made in developing countries where improved crop output is a high priority.

With deep margins and a respectable cash-flow engine, this stock should find its dividend payouts relatively safe in the future. That’s the hope of Monsanto shareholders like the Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund(VPMCX).

Other major holders of Monsanto include George Soros and The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

On Dec. 28 Monsanto announced that it tapped Pierre Courduroux as its new CFO and senior vice president, effective Jan. 1, 2011. The 45-year-old currently serves as Monsanto’s finance lead for its global business operations.

Courduroux joined Monsanto in 1990 and was recently responsible for the global finance organization across Monsanto’s crop protection and seeds-and-traits divisions.

“For more than 20 years, Pierre has been a valuable asset to Monsanto and our finance organization,” said CEO Hugh Grant. “Pierre understands our business, has proven financial expertise, and applies that to executing on our strategic vision. His leadership will provide a key anchor as Monsanto focuses on the operational implementation that will drive the growth in this company over the long term.”

On Dec. 29 analysts from Argus Research reiterated a hold rating on Monsanto shares. Boenning & Scattergood initiated coverage of the agribusiness in October with a neutral rating. Deutsche Bank reiterated a buy rating on the stock in late September, lowering its price target by $5 to $65.

Waste Management (WM)

Company Profile: Waste Management is a Houston-based provider of integrated waste services in North America. Through its subsidiaries, it provides collection, transfer, recycling, disposal and waste-to-energy services.

Waste Management raised its quarterly dividend by 7.9% to 34 cents per share, marking its seventh consecutive annual dividend increase.

The company said its board will declare the dividend in February, during the first quarter of 2011, and will set the record and payment dates at that time. The first payment is expected to be made in March of next year, bringing Waste Management’s yield to around 3.7%.

Waste Management is the league leader in the waste business, with nearly 20 million customers under its belt. Waste has long been a favored industry because of its recession resistance — an especially attractive attribute when times are tough.

Still, short-squeeze opportunities exist around Waste Management as a number of investors bet blue chips like it will fall.

As of early December Waste Management sported a short-interest ratio of 11.2.

Waste collection is a relatively low-margin industry, and right now operators are approaching market saturation here in the U.S. With relatively high fixed costs (the result of union agreements and the high capital requirements of operating truck fleets and waste disposal sites), Waste Management needs to keep its operations churning to continue to deliver dividend-generating profits to investors.

Even so, there’s little else in the way of bearish catalysts to justify the high short ratio this stock is currently seeing. With decent cash generation capabilities, expect trimmer operations — and more buyers — ahead.

Waste Management (WM)

Company Profile: Waste Management is a Houston-based provider of integrated waste services in North America. Through its subsidiaries, it provides collection, transfer, recycling, disposal and waste-to-energy services.

Waste Management raised its quarterly dividend by 7.9% to 34 cents per share, marking its seventh consecutive annual dividend increase.

The company said its board will declare the dividend in February, during the first quarter of 2011, and will set the record and payment dates at that time. The first payment is expected to be made in March of next year, bringing Waste Management’s yield to around 3.7%.

Waste Management is the league leader in the waste business, with nearly 20 million customers under its belt. Waste has long been a favored industry because of its recession resistance — an especially attractive attribute when times are tough.

Still, short-squeeze opportunities exist around Waste Management as a number of investors bet blue chips like it will fall.

As of early December Waste Management sported a short-interest ratio of 11.2.

Waste collection is a relatively low-margin industry, and right now operators are approaching market saturation here in the U.S. With relatively high fixed costs (the result of union agreements and the high capital requirements of operating truck fleets and waste disposal sites), Waste Management needs to keep its operations churning to continue to deliver dividend-generating profits to investors.

Even so, there’s little else in the way of bearish catalysts to justify the high short ratio this stock is currently seeing. With decent cash generation capabilities, expect trimmer operations — and more buyers — ahead.


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Dominion Resources(D)

Company Profile: Richmond, Va.-based Dominion Resources is a producer and transporter of energy. It manages its daily operations through three operating segments: Dominion Virginia Power of DVP, Dominion Energy and Dominion Generation.

Dominion Resources raised its annual dividend by 7.7% to $1.97 per share, or 49.25 cents per share on a quarterly basis. It also set a new dividend payout ratio of 60% to 65%, up from a ratio of 55%, lifting the ratio of dividends to earnings it plans to pay going forward.

That brings Dominion’s yield to around 4.6%.

Warmer weather and improvements at Dominion’s Virginia Power business and generation unit recently helped the utility post stronger quarterly results. Third-quarter profits fell 3.2%, dragged by the effects of taxes, but adjusted for one-time items both revenue and earnings grew in the period.

Dominion also said its board elected a new director, Helen E. Dragas. The twelfth member of the board is a Virgina real estate executive.

On Dec. 29, Dominion Virginia Power announced plans for a five-year investment plan to bolster its energy production capacity.

CEO Paul D. Koonce said Dominion Virginia Power will invest $7.6 billion over the next five years for new power stations and other electric infrastructure as demand among its customers grows. The investments will also cover “reliability enhancements and new technology that will allow customers to save money on their energy bills,” the company said.

“The trends remain clear that Virginia’s economy continues a slow-but-steady recovery, the state’s population is growing, and the demand for energy is moving right along with it,” Koonce said. “We are committed to support that growth in the most cost-effective, reliable and responsible way.”

The plans adds to a three-year effort announced last January for investments from 2010 through 2012 that would total $4 billion.

Koonce said that growth beyond that time period will necessitate adding additional energy to “to power the equivalent of 1.4 million new homes by 2020.”

Moody’s(MCO_)

Company Profile: New York City-based Moody’s is a provider of credit ratings, credit and economic related research, data and analytical tools, risk management software and quantitative credit risk measures, credit portfolio management solutions and training services.

Moody’s increased its quarterly cash payout by 9.5% to 11.5 cents per share.

The increased dividend will be paid on March 10, 2011 to shareholders of record on Feb. 20. That brings Moody’s yield to around 1.8%.

The ratings agency predicts “the most likely 2011 macroeconomic scenario to be a sluggish economic recovery with persistent high unemployment.”

As a result, corporations will probably use excess liquidity to entice investors with dividend rewards and juice EPS with stock buybacks. It’s a new phase for the earnings “growth” that’s been occurring since 2009. Companies have been great at cutting costs through layoffs and other efficiencies, but less great at boosting the top line. Similarly, banks’ “reserve releasing” has padded earnings and masked the fact that, for the most part, their fundamental business lines aren’t growing.

Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM)

Company Profile: Agnico-Eagle Mines is a Toronto, Ontario-based gold producer with operations located in Quebec and Finland, and exploration and development activities in Canada, Finland, Mexico and the United States.

Agnico-Eagle raised its cash dividend for 2011 to 16 cents per share, paid in Canadian funds, less applicable taxes. The higher payout will be available on March 15, 2011 to holders of record on March 1.

In a recent RealMoney column by Jim Cramer he wrote that “not only is gold scarce, but remember there aren’t many miners and not a lot of new mines. Anyone whose jaw dropped like mine did when I saw the slicing and dicing of Agnico Eagle because they didn’t raise their production growth to lofty levels but had their exploration and production costs go up knows what I am talking about. If the best operator in the universe is having extraction problems from existing mines, what does that say about the ones that have seen gold already peak? Do they all have to go to the most politically dangerous places in the world — the only ones left — to find it.”

On Cramer’s Dec. 16 episode of “Mad Money ” on CNBC he said that “everyone is selling the gold stocks. They just gave you a huge dividend. I’m a huge buyer of Agnico-Eagle.”

Gold prices have spiked recently with futures rising above $1,400. On Dec. 27 gold prices were shrugging off global rate hikes as trading stayed light and a blizzard hit the Eastern seaboard of the U.S.

The greatly talked about and feared event of a rate hike in China happened with little fanfare to gold prices. The People’s Bank of China raised the one-year lending rate by 25 basis points to 5.81% on Christmas, the second time in more than two months, to fight inflation.

China had raised the amount banks must keep in their reserves six times this year in order to take money out of circulation but November’s inflation reading was still 5.1% compared with year-earlier results.

The much more aggressive step of raising key interest rates had been long feared by gold investors. Higher interest rates make it more appealing to keep money in the bank and a higher lending rate makes it less appealing to borrow. Both might hurt consumer demand for gold, despite the fact that China had been actively trying to promote it.

Iron Mountain (IRM)

Company Profile: Boston-based Iron Mountain is a global provider of information protection and storage services. It has five operating segments: North American Physical Business; Worldwide Digital Business; Europe; Latin America; Asia Pacific.

Iron Mountain announced its board approved a 200% increase of its quarterly cash dividend to 18.75 cents per share. It will be paid on Jan. 14, 2011 to shareholders of record on Dec. 27. That brings Iron Mountain’s yield to around 3%.

Adam Seessel, manager of the RiverPark/Gravity Long-Biased Fund tapped Iron Mountain as a contrarian stock play for 2011. Seessel is generally very bearish on the macroeconomic picture and thinks stock prices are fairly valued.

He said that “Iron Mountain is unloved. And, as value investors, that’s what we look for. Iron Mountain is the leading document-storage provider in America and its basically selling as if it is going to go out of business in 17 years, which is the average contractual life of one of its boxes. Here again, as with Yahoo!(YHOO), if it survives past 17 years, then it’s gravy.”