There are too many stocks in the marketplace for one person to pay attention to at any given time. I don’t try; instead one of the best tools I’ve found to filter through the market quickly for fundamental strength is dividend payout.
Dividends are one of the simplest ways for a company’s management to express confidence in its long-term prospects, and to return value to its shareholders. Talking heads and a lot of analysts tend to focus on stock repurchases, but I think dividends are better, because they act as a passive income source that puts useful, periodic cash in shareholder’s accounts.
The pandemic-driven conditions of the last three years have only reinforced the value of dividends as a fundamental metric in my system. That’s because a lot of companies chose to reduce or eliminate their dividend payouts altogether as a way to preserve cash to weather the difficult conditions imposed by COVID restrictions. While understandable, it also provided a refined method to filter quickly through the market and identify the stocks that are likely to provide the best fit for my preferred investing method. The fact that a lot of stocks also dropped to or near historical lows during that time helped as well, as valuations across the board improved.
Over the last year and a half, economic and social activity has begun to return some form of normal. That is a big part of what spurred economic growth to the point that in 2022 the Fed began raising interest rates aggressively, to the point that now in 2023 the question is no longer how long rates will remain high, but whether those increases will aid the “soft landing” the Fed is aiming for, or simply push the economy into a complete, new recession. The result for most of the last year has been uncertainty that pushed the market into its own legitimate bear market in 2022. Even as the market is attempting a rally to start the new year, a host of questions that breed uncertainty remain, which to me means that a lot of companies that have dropped to attractive valuation levels may remain low, or even move lower this year. That means that dividends will continue to be a useful way to filter the market for stocks that I think provide the best opportunities to keep your money working for you.
One example of a stock that announced a resumption of dividend payments last year is Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. (CALM). This is a company in the defensively positioned Food Products industry of the Consumer Staples sector that has historically followed a variable dividend payout policy, based primarily on whether it achieves a positive Net income result in a given quarter. In 2021, management announced a $.034 per share dividend payout, followed by a $.13 per share payout in the first quarter of 2022, $.85 for their last payout of the year, and $1.35 following their most recent earnings announcement. The resumption of its dividend, along with the increases implemented over the past year are positive marks for the company’s generally improving fundamental picture.
This is also a stock that has diverged from the pattern of the broad market, and even many stocks in the Food Products industry in 2022. From a low point at around $34 in January of last year, the stock peak in December at around $65.50, marking an impressive upward trend for the year. Since then, the stock has dropped back to find a new stabilization level at around $53, and has rallied off of that level to its current price at around $56. Fundamentally, the company also includes an improving fundamental profile. Along with its current price action, the stock could be sitting at a level that makes it useful as a long-term, defensive investment during uncertain market conditions. Let’s dive in.
Fundamental and Value Profile
Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. is a producer and marketer of shell eggs in the United States. The Company operates through the segment of production, grading, packaging, marketing and distribution of shell eggs. It offers shell eggs, including specialty and non-specialty eggs. It classifies cage free, organic and brown eggs as specialty products. It classifies all other shell eggs as non-specialty products. The Company markets its specialty shell eggs under the brands, including Egg-Land’s Best, Land O’ Lakes, Farmhouse and 4-Grain. The Company, through Egg-Land’s Best, Inc. (EB), produces, markets and distributes Egg-Land’s Best and Land O’ Lakes branded eggs. It markets cage-free eggs under its Farmhouse brand and distributes them throughout southeast and southwest regions of the United States. It markets organic, wholesome, cage-free, vegetarian and omega-3 eggs under its 4-Grain brand. It also produces, markets and distributes private label specialty shell eggs to customers. CALM has a current market cap of about $2.7 billion.
Earnings and Sales Growth: Over the last twelve months, earnings grew by 20,250% (not a typo), while revenues increased by more than 109%. In the last quarter, earnings were a little over 58% higher, while sales rose by almost 22%. The company’s margin profile has recovered from a negative pattern that predated the pandemic, and has been showing strength for the last couple of quarters. Net Income as a percentage of Revenues over the last twelve months was 18.7%, and strengthened to nearly 25% in the last quarter.
Free Cash Flow: CALM’s free cash flow is very healthy, at a little more than $386 million; that is a continuation of a reversal from negative Free Cash Flow of -$32 million a year ago. The current number translates to an attractive Free Cash Flow Yield of 14.12%.
Debt to Equity: CALM’s debt to equity is .0, which means that CALM has no long-term debt. Their balance sheet shows about $379.5 million in cash and liquid assets. CALM has healthy, improving liquidity; a year ago, their balance sheet showed just a little over $96 million in cash, and $281.8 million in the quarter prior to the most recent earnings report.
Dividend: CALM’s dividend payouts so far in 2022, if followed consistently over time, work out to an annualized dividend of about $3.08 per share. I qualify that metric because CALM has historically kept their dividend variable, and can be expected to continue to do so. As previously mentioned, management has been increasing their dividend for most of the past year, which is a positive signal.
Price/Book Ratio: there are a lot of ways to measure how much a stock should be worth; but I like to worth with a combination of Price/Book and Price/Cash Flow analysis. Together, these measurements provide a long-term target a little above $69 per share. That suggests CALM is undervalued by about 24% right now.
Technical Profile
Here’s a look at the stock’s latest technical chart.
Current Price Action/Trends and Pivots: The diagonal red line traces the stock’s upward trend over the past year from a low at around $38 to its December high at about $65.50. It also provides the reference for the Fibonacci retracement lines on the right side of the chart. After dropping sharply off of its high, the stock found its last pivot low at around $53 to mark current support there, with immediate resistance at about $59. A push above $59 should see upside to around $61 in the very near-term, with additional room to retest the stock’s 52-week high above $65. A drop below $53 should have limited downside, with next support sitting at around $51 (a little below the 50% retracement line), and additional room to fall to about $48.50 if selling activity picks up.
Near-term Keys: The stock’s recent drop off of its latest, yearly high could be setting up an interesting signal to “buy the dip”, which means that push above $59 could be an interesting signal to consider buying the stock or working with call options, with $61 acting as a quick-hit profit target, and $65 possible if buying activity accelerates. A drop below $53 could be a signal to consider shorting the stock or buying put options, with $51 providing a practical initial bearish profit target, but $48.50 possible if selling pressure intensifies. The stock’s fundamental strength and value proposition, in the meantime make the stock an interesting candidate to consider as a long-term investment candidate.