Chapter 4 of 8
Is the dividend safe?
A fat yield is worthless if the payout gets cut. A few signals hint at how durable it is.
The payout ratio — the share of earnings paid as dividends — is the first check: low leaves room to grow and to weather a bad year; very high can mean the payout is stretched. A long history of steady or rising dividends is reassuring; a recent cut is a red flag.
How fast and how reliably the dividend grows matters too. The dividend CAGR is the compound annual growth rate of the payout over recent years — a steadier read than any single year. The growth streak counts the consecutive years a company has raised its dividend; clear 25 years and it earns the "dividend aristocrat" label, a mark of unusually dependable raises. A cut or a frozen year ends the streak.
Debt is the other side of the story. A company that owes a lot pays its lenders before its shareholders, so heavy borrowing leaves the dividend more exposed when profits dip. Debt-to-equity compares what a company owes to what it's worth to its owners; the current and quick ratios check whether it has enough short-term assets to cover the coming year's bills. Stretched debt on top of an already-high payout is the combination most worth watching.
Quantic distills several of these signals into a single dividend score from 0 to 10 — a quick read on quality, not a recommendation to buy.
No single number is the whole story. Treat scores and ratios as a starting point for a closer look, never as advice.
Key terms
- Payout ratio
- The share of earnings paid out as dividends. Low leaves room to grow and absorb shocks; very high can signal a payout that's hard to sustain.
- Dividend score
- Quantic's 0–10 read on a dividend's quality, blending yield, payout stability and growth. Higher means sturdier — it's information, not a buy signal.
- 5-year dividend CAGR
- The compound annual growth rate of a company's dividend over the last five full years — the steady yearly pace at which the payout has grown, smoothing out one-off jumps.
- Dividend growth streak
- The number of consecutive years a company has raised its dividend. A long streak signals reliability; 25+ years earns the "dividend aristocrat" label.
- Debt-to-equity
- Total debt divided by shareholders' equity, as a percentage. 100% means a company owes as much as it's worth to owners; higher means more borrowing — and more of its cash going to lenders before dividends.
- Current ratio
- Short-term assets divided by short-term liabilities. Above 1 means a company can cover the coming year's bills from cash and near-cash; below 1 is a liquidity squeeze that can pressure the dividend.
- Quick ratio
- Like the current ratio but stricter — it excludes inventory, counting only the most liquid assets against short-term liabilities. A tougher test of whether a company can pay its near-term bills.
Ready to put it into practice?
Explore a sample portfolio — no signup — or create your free account and start tracking your own dividends.