NetApp (Nasdaq: NTAP) is a cloud storage and data management company based in Silicon Valley. But unlike most tech companies, this one has a robust 4.5% dividend yield.
Can tech investors expect to continue to receive their $0.48 per share quarterly dividend?
A big red flag is that NetApp’s free cash flow is headed in the wrong direction. In 2019, it declined slightly to $1.17 billion from $1.33 billion the year before.
This year, free cash flow is projected to drop to $936 million, and then it’s expected to drop all the way down to $714 million in 2021.
This year, NetApp is forecast to pay $439 million in dividends, or 60% of its free cash flow.
In normal, nonpandemic times, that would be perfectly okay. But during the pandemic, I’ve taken my threshold for an acceptable payout ratio down to 50%. (A company’s payout ratio is the percentage of free cash flow that it pays in dividends.)
The reason I lowered the threshold from 75% to 50% is because the pandemic has created havoc for many businesses. Across the board, management teams understandably feel the need to conserve cash.
I want to make sure we are not caught by surprise, assuming a dividend is safe only to see it cut later.
A company that pays out 50% or less of its cash in dividends has a big enough buffer that it can afford to keep paying the dividend even if free cash flow dips.
NetApp has a solid but brief dividend-paying history. Since it began paying a dividend in 2013, it has raised the payout every year except 2020.
But that dividend track record isn’t enough for SafetyNet Pro. The falling free cash flow is a major problem, and the higher-than-acceptable payout ratio is also an issue.
NetApp’s dividend is attractive, especially for a tech company, but I don’t think you can consider it safe. The dividend cut may not come immediately, but if 2021’s numbers are weaker than expected, a reduction next year is very possible.
Dividend Safety Rating: D
If you have a stock whose dividend safety you’d like me to analyze, leave the ticker symbol in the comments section.
Good investing,
Marc