Dividend Investing And The Corporate Lifecycle

 | Mar 12, 2024 10:15

Being a long-term investor provides individuals with the experience of participating in the expectant growth that will occur over time with a company’s maturity. Take for example Facebook (NASDAQ:META) (now Meta Platforms), which has been in existence for two decades as of February 2024 (please note: Facebook went public with its initial public offering on May 18, 2012) and has gone through many changes.

Beginning as a start-up that ushered in the ‘social media’ era, the firm has grown through acquisition over the years to become one of the most sophisticated media and digital advertising platforms, while also being among the largest companies globally by market capitalization. But Meta Platform’s growth is also reflective of a new change occurring with the company – its maturity – in that it is entering a new phase of its corporate life cycle and the value it will provide to investors now is much different than in years prior. A clear indication of this change is that Meta Platforms will now begin issuing a quarterly dividend of 50 cents per share to shareholders.

This article will showcase the importance of dividends within an investor’s total return and highlight dividend-focused ETFs that are worth consideration.

h2 How Maturing Companies Add Value Over Time/h2

The maturity of a company is similar in nature to that of a person, in that as people age, they develop new characteristics. Similarly, as companies age, they provide a newfound value to investors, such as a source of income via dividends. When looking at the landscape, many of the established tech companies are entering a stage of maturity that would lead them to become dividend issuers, Facebook and Salesforce being the most recent to make such an announcement.

The rationale for paying dividends is simply, rather than using cash to make an unnecessary acquisition that may have no accretive value to shareholders – the mid-life crisis yellow Lamborghini purchase – paying dividends returns value to shareholders and messages to their investor base, and broader market, that the firm is transitioning from the ‘hyper-growth’ years of the past to the ‘stable, consistent’ growth years of the present and future that come with an established firm.

In examining the performance of the S&P 500 Price Return Index and S&P 500 Total Return Index over the past two decades, we can demonstrate the seminal importance of dividends across differing periods. As observed in the following chart, while the contributing impact of dividends does vary over each 5-year window, its additive component is unrefutably in nature.