BMO insurance deal confirms dividend safety
The news is out about AIG’s Canadian Life Insurance business, and despite the rumours on Bloomberg, BMO Financial Group wound up as the winning bidder.
I was in a TV studio in mid-December, and one of folks sitting beside me asked me what I thought would “happen” with the BMO dividend. The premise of his question was understandable: with a 9% handle, won’t BMO management have to cut the dividend? Isn’t that what the market is telling us?
I suggested that he separate the actual implied yield from what is most likely to happen. The market might be pounding BMO and BNS for a variety of reasons, but the fact that the dividend at BMO had hit 9% as a result was an afterthought. If any PMs were thinking about it at all. If BMO had to cut the dividend, it would be due to future unforseen financial problems, not the simple fact that the stock was at $30 and the implied yield was 9%.
A short time later, BMO raised $1 billion of equity at $30, which confirmed that 1) the market hadn’t given up hope on the business, and 2) that BMO management must have known that selling stock, only to cut the dividend a few quarters later, would be a potentially CLM, and were comfortable with where it stood.
Two more weeks has passed, and BMO is spending $375MM of that $1 billion on an important new business thrust. This is not the action of an institution that is worried about free cash flow, or their ability to continue to pay the $2.80 dividend (now yielding 8.5%).
That’s why it is in the Decade of Daddy Mirror Fund.
MRM
(disclosure – I own BMO)
BMO also just announced that DRIP participants will enjoy a 2% discount on shares purchased throught the program. I’m thinking BMO is a good long term investment at this point.
Tech Cominco which WAS an asset rich company with a long history of dividend increases, acquired Fording Coal at the cusp of the credit crunch. Now it’s goodbye dividends. Do we really know if the derivative mess is over?