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Plato Income Maximiser Limited (ASX:PL8) stock is about to trade ex-dividend in 4 days. The ex-dividend date is one business day before the record date, which is the cut-off date for shareholders to be present on the company's books to be eligible for a dividend payment. The ex-dividend date is of consequence because whenever a stock is bought or sold, the trade takes at least two business day to settle. In other words, investors can purchase Plato Income Maximiser's shares before the 14th of November in order to be eligible for the dividend, which will be paid on the 29th of November.
The company's next dividend payment will be AU$0.0055 per share, and in the last 12 months, the company paid a total of AU$0.066 per share. Looking at the last 12 months of distributions, Plato Income Maximiser has a trailing yield of approximately 5.3% on its current stock price of AU$1.245. Dividends are a major contributor to investment returns for long term holders, but only if the dividend continues to be paid. So we need to check whether the dividend payments are covered, and if earnings are growing.
View our latest analysis for Plato Income Maximiser
If a company pays out more in dividends than it earned, then the dividend might become unsustainable - hardly an ideal situation. Plato Income Maximiser is paying out an acceptable 70% of its profit, a common payout level among most companies.
When a company paid out less in dividends than it earned in profit, this generally suggests its dividend is affordable. The lower the % of its profit that it pays out, the greater the margin of safety for the dividend if the business enters a downturn.
Click here to see how much of its profit Plato Income Maximiser paid out over the last 12 months.
Have Earnings And Dividends Been Growing?
Companies with falling earnings are riskier for dividend shareholders. If business enters a downturn and the dividend is cut, the company could see its value fall precipitously. With that in mind, we're discomforted by Plato Income Maximiser's 5.4% per annum decline in earnings in the past five years. Ultimately, when earnings per share decline, the size of the pie from which dividends can be paid, shrinks.
We'd also point out that Plato Income Maximiser issued a meaningful number of new shares in the past year. It's hard to grow dividends per share when a company keeps creating new shares.
Many investors will assess a company's dividend performance by evaluating how much the dividend payments have changed over time. Plato Income Maximiser has delivered an average of 2.9% per year annual increase in its dividend, based on the past seven years of dividend payments. Growing the dividend payout ratio while earnings are declining can deliver nice returns for a while, but it's always worth checking for when the company can't increase the payout ratio any more - because then the music stops.