Posts Tagged ‘covered call’

Dow Dividend Stocks – Top 5 Covered Calls

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Maybe you want to buy blue chip Dow dividend stocks, but you don’t have much faith in price appreciation, given the market’s performance in 2010 thus far.  Selling covered calls often allows you to lock in a much higher yield than the current dividend yield of most dividend paying stocks.

We screened for the highest at the money covered call trades for the Dow 30, and came up with yields ranging from 8.54% to 10.17% for CAT, GE, BA, MSFT, and INTC. (Full names in table below.)  Pretty nice yields, especially when you consider that the annual yields for these 5 stocks range from just 2.18% to 3.20%.  Given that these option trades are all 6 to 8 month trades, their annualized yields are even higher, as you can see below:

DowCovCalls-9-1-10

(We’ve listed these trades this week in our Covered Calls Table, which gives you more specifics.)

Here’s a Performance table which lists each stock’s Year-to-Date, 2nd Quarter, and 1-Year price performance:

Dow5-Perf.2010thru9-1

This group’s Industrials far outperformed the Techs in a declining market YTD.  The overall Tech sector also lagged Industrials over the past year, with Industrials up 18.3% and Tech up only 9.8%.  Year-to-date, Tech is down -2.9%, and Industrials are up 3.1%.

As most value investors will tell you, lagging sectors can often be a good place to look for bargains.  The 2 Tech firms in this group, Intel, (INTC), and Microsoft, (MSFT) both have PEG ratios below 1, a statistic which is generally recognized as indicating that a stock may be undervalued.

Dow5PEGS-9-1-10

As with any strategy, there are pros and cons you should consider when selling covered calls.

Pros:

  1. Immediate Cash Inflow – Instead of waiting each quarter to collect dividends, when you sell a covered call, you’ll receive the call bid premium money into your account within 3 days from making the sale, often even the same day, depending upon your broker.  Of course, you’ll also keep collecting the dividends on the underlying shares.
  2. Superior Yield – As you can see from the table, these particular call yields are 3 to 4+ times the dividend yields.  This strategy allows you to transform a modest yield into a superior one.
  3. Downside Protection – The call premium $ you receive lowers your break-even cost, giving you more downside protection.
  4. You Know The Trading Range Before Making The Trade – This strategy tells you your exact upside profit potential, and your downside break-even, before you trade, as opposed to buying a stock and trying to determine what your upside potential will be.
  5. The Odds Are With You – It’s been proven that 3 out of 4 options expire worthless. When you’re an option seller, time is on your side, as opposed to the options buyer, who must not only guess the stock’s ultimate direction and approximate price, but must do it before expiration.

Cons:

  1. Limited Rally Participation – Once you sell a covered call, you’re obligated to deliver the underlying shares at your sold call’s strike price if they get assigned, (sold) away from you, no matter how high the stock goes. So, if you think there’s going to be a big rally, then you may not want to sell covered calls.
  2. Higher Entry Costs – You must own 100 shares of the underlying stock for every covered call that you sell.  Therefore, covered call sellers have a greater initial outlay than call options buyers.
  3. Assignment Risk – Selling covered calls against a stock puts you in jeopardy of having your shares sold away from you.  You have to weigh many factors, such as the dividend yield today, and potential dividend growth, and possible price appreciation.  However, if you think that the market is going to be range-bound, or bearish, then the covered call strategy will give you some added downside protection.

Deciding whether or not to sell covered call options comes down to many issues, such as, your risk profile and your market outlook.  If you want to capture some cash yields immediately, and not wait for the market to decide its direction, then this strategy may be right for you.

Disclosure: Author is long shares of INTC, and short INTC calls.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only, and isn’t intended as investment advice.

2 Undervalued Chinese Dividend Stocks – Cninsure and Sinopec

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

We’re continuing our quest for international dividend stocks this week with 2 Chinese dividend paying stocks that all have low PEG/ high EPS growth forecasts, low debt, strong management metrics, and options trading available.  These 2 stocks trade in the US.

This group includes an oil & gas firm and an insurance company.  These two firms were added this week to our Covered Call Table and Cash Secured Puts Table.

Although CISG doesn’t have an impressive dividend yield, it does have very attractive option yields.  We added both CISG and SNP to our Covered Call Table this week.  Based on Friday’s prices, the annualized Jan. 2011 covered call yield for CISG is 23.99%, while Jan. 2011 SNP covered calls are yielding 17.5%.

We also added CISG and SNP to our Cash Secured Put Table, where CISG Jan 2011 put options are yielding over 24%, and SNP Jan 2011 puts are yielding over 12% annualized.

Dividend Schedules:

SNP pays semi-annually, in July (paid $1.61), and October

CISG paid an annual dividend of $.26 in June*

*Note: Many of the financial websites have incorrectly listed CISG as paying $1.04/year, with a 4.45% dividend yield.  The sites incorrectly multiplied CISG’s annual payment by 4.

Here are profiles for each firm, taken from their websites:

Cninsure (CISG): Distributes a wide variety of property and casualty insurance products and life insurance products underwritten by both domestic and foreign insurance companies operating in China, and offers insurance claims adjusting services, such as assessment, survey, authentication and loss estimation, as well as other insurance-related services to individuals and institutions. As an insurance intermediary, the Company is not exposed to any underwriting risks.

Over the past 11 years, CNinsure has established a distribution and service network across China, with 57 affiliated insurance intermediary companies operating in the PRC, of which 50 are insurance agencies, three are insurance brokerages and four are insurance adjusting companies. With 45,039 sales professionals, 1,421 claims adjustors and 554 sales and service outlets, its distribution network reaches 23 provinces, including some of China’s most economically developed regions and affluent cities in China, such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. (Source: Cninsure website)

Sinopec (SNP): One of the largest integrated energy and chemical companies in China, with integrated upstream, midstream and downstream operations, strong oil & petrochemical core businesses and a complete marketing network. SNP was incorporated on 25th February, 2000, and is China’s largest producer and supplier of refined oil products (including gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, etc.) and major petrochemical products (including synthetic resin, synthetic fiber monomers and polymers, synthetic fiber, synthetic rubber, chemical fertilizer and petrochemical intermediates). It is also China’s second largest crude oil producer.  (Source: Sinopec website)

Here’s how these 2 firms stack up vs. S&P 500 Valuation averages:

P/E PEG P/B EPS GROWTH

THIS YEAR

EPS GROWTH

NEXT YEAR

EPS GROWTH

NEXT 5 YEARS

CISG 22.90 .76 3.50 55.04% 27.59% 29.97%
SNP 7.66 .26 1.20 145.13% 15.88% 29.70%
S&P 500 Averages 18.70 NA
3.40
NA NA NA

Here’s a comparison of Financial Metrics:

Dividend Yield ROA ROE ROI DEBT/EQUITY
CISG 1.13% 13.12% 16.70% 15.56% NO DEBT
SNP 3.30% 7.78% 17.56% 12.73% 0.39
S&P 500 Averages 2.49% 8.06% 18.62% 10.73% 0.75






CISG’s Q1 2010 revenues grew 31% and their net income rose 58% vs. last year same period. They’re expecting 35% earnings growth for Q2 2010. They expect the next three to five

years to be the “golden period for the development of China’s insurance and financial services

industries, in the wake of China’s widening economic recovery, the rapid accumulation of

personal wealth by Chinese people and the PRC government’s stimulus incentives on domestic

consumption.” (Source: CISG website)

SNP’s Q1 2010 net profit rose 40% vs. a year ago. They also raised $2.9 billion in China’s biggest bond offering to date this year.

Disclosure: No positions at this time. (Note: We removed TPI from this article, due to their discontinuing their dividends).

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

© 2010 DeMar Marketing.  All rights reserved.

Cato Corp., (CATO), An Apparel Dividend Stock With Fashionable Option Yields

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Cato Corp., is a fashion specialty retailer which is listed in the Consumer Discretionary section of our High Dividend Stocks by Sector tables. They target value and fashion-oriented females, and operate over 1200 women’s fashion stores, primarily in the southeastern U.S. They just reported that same-store sales are up 5% year-to-date, and that June sales increased 1%.  In their last fiscal quarter, ending 5/01/10, their revenue rose 8.9%, and their net income jumped 44%.

This is a conservatively managed firm, with zero debt, and it fares well in our Industry Comparison Table:

CATO Apparel Industry
P/E 11.81 16.24
Price/Free Cash Flow 11.27 19.98
Price/Book 2.11 2.88
Debt/Equity NO DEBT 28.47%
ROE (TTM) 18.09% 3.66%
ROI (TTM) 17.14% 2.26%
Dividend Yield 3.33% 1.81%

There are attractive covered calls and cash secured put options trades available for CATO.

These two covered call trades yield from 14.7% up to a potential 34.9% annualized:

(July 8. 22, 2010 closing price) Dividends Pre-expiration Expi-ration month/Call Strike Price Call Bid Premium Total Static Yield (Annualized) Potential Assigned Yield (Ann’d) Total Potential Yield (Ann’d)
$22.56 $.37 Jan.2011/$22.50 $2.25 21.7% -.06% 21.01%
$.37 Jan.2011/$25.00 $1.40 14.84% 20.2% 35.19%

For more conservative investors, there’s also an attractive put option trade, with a 22%-plus yield and a lower break-even price, listed in our Put Selling Table.

CATO pays an $.185/share quarterly dividend, with their next ex-dividend date coming approximately Sept. 10th.  They have a 35% dividend payout ratio.

Disclosure: No shares held at this time

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

© 2010 DeMar Marketing. All rights reserved.

5 Defensive Utility Dividend Stocks

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

With the S&P down 12% and the Dow off nearly 10% in the 2nd quarter, you might well be thinking about defensive dividend stocks.  Comparing the various Industry Sectors over the 2nd quarter, the Utility sector has held up the best, dropping approx. 5.2%, vs. Basic Materials’ 17.2% loss.

We screened the Utility section of our High Dividend Stocks by Sector tables for dividend paying stocks with above-average ROE, ROI, ROA figures, and below-average Debt/Equity and P/E’s.

This search yielded 5 stocks, 4 from the US, and 1 from Brazil:

  • CPFL Energia (CPL) – A Brazilian electric utility based in Sao Paulo, that serves 6.6 million residential, industrial and commercial customers, mainly in the Sao Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul areas.  In 2009, they expanded into thermoelectric, biomass, and wind generation projects.  CPL has benefitted from the rapidly growing Brazilian economy. They pay 2 semi-annual dividends, with ex-dates in March and August.
  • Excelon Corp. (EXC) – A hybrid nuclear/natural gas utility, with customers in southeastern Pa. And northern Illinois. They’re the largest U.S. nuclear producer. (For more details, see our previous article about EXC.)  They pay $.525/share quarterly, with their next ex-dividend date coming up in August.
  • DPL Inc. (DPL) – DPL’s subsidiary, the Dayton Power & Light Co., is a regional electric utility that services all customer segments in west central Ohio.  They pay $.303/share quarterly, with their next ex-dividend date coming up in August.
  • Energy Inc. (EGAS) – A natural gas utility that distributes and sells to residential, commercial, and industrial customers in Maine, N. Carolina, Wyoming and Montana.   They pay $.045/share monthly.
  • AGL Resources (AGL) – An energy services holding company, that distributes natural gas in 6 eastern US states. AGL also owns natgas pipelines and sells telecom conduit and fiber optic cable.  They pay $.44/share quarterly, with their next ex-dividend date coming up in August.

Here’s how these 5 utility stocks stacked up vs. Utility Sector Averages:

CPL EXC DPL EGAS AGL Utility Sector Avgs.
DIVIDEND YIELD 6.39% 5.52% 5.05% 4.97% 4.93% 3.43%
ROE

25.88%

21.55%

21.53%

19.64%

13.28%

11.65%
ROI

11.96%

6.07%

7.07%

13.31%

5.28%

4.36%
ROA

8.34%

5.51%

6.34%

9.34%

3.99%

3.87%
Debt/Equity

1.34

.97

1.14

.77 1.16 1.43
OPERATING MARGIN

17.12%

28.72%

26.29%

15.82%

21.46%

18.74%
P/E 13.80 9.17 11.98 6.03 11.67 17.27

There are covered call and put options available on EXC, DPL, and AGL.  With the market decline, put options are currently offering much higher bid premiums than call options. Many investors sell cash-secured puts, as an alternative to buying a stock outright, in order to decrease their risk, by achieving a lower break-even point.

Of these 3 stocks, Excelon currently has the most attractive yields for selling cash-secured puts, and is listed in our Covered Put table.

Disclosure: No positions at this time.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

© 2010 DeMar Marketing.  All rights reserved.

Linear Tech, (LLTC) – An Undervalued Tech Dividend Stock With Growth Potential

Friday, May 14th, 2010

If you’re looking for undervalued dividend paying stocks in the Tech sector, you may want to consider Linear Technology, (LLTC), a firm which designs, manufactures and markets integrated circuits in the Specialized Semiconductor sub-sector.  A recent addition to the Tech section of our High Dividend Stocks by Sector tables, LLTC currently has a 3.26% dividend yield, paying $.23/share quarterly.  You can also increase your yield on LLTC, via options trading strategies, such as selling covered calls or selling put options.

LLTC fares well in our Industry Comparison table:

LLTC Semiconductor Industry
P/E 22.24 28.30
Price/Cash Flow/Share 18.92 22.83

ROE

45.01 10.74
ROA 18.55 8.06
ROI 49.37 9.65
Debt/Equity NO DEBT 19.30

LLTC also offers investors strong prospects for growth. In April, LLTC reported a 100% increase in net income of $.44/share, and a 55% jump in revenue.  Forbes reports that, LLTC’s “trailing 12-month earnings have already replicated its best ever four consecutive quarters”…”subsequent comparisons will necessarily moderate, but likely sustain 25 % to 30% or even higher rates of growth through 2012.” Indeed, using a baseline valuation method, even using a much lower growth rate of 15%, indicates an intrinsic value of $49.36.

Using the current consensus 2011 growth rate of 31% shows a PEG of just .74 for LLTC, which would also indicate that it’s undervalued.

More defensive, income-oriented investors may wish to hedge their bets on LLTC by selling covered calls.  However, they may miss out on a substantial upside gain.

Our Covered Call table lists the Jan. 2011 $30.00 call, which had a bid today of $2.20, an 11.5% annualized yield.  In addition, covered call sellers should receive two dividend payments of  $.23/quarter prior to the Jan. expiration, for a total payout of  $2.66/share.

The total static yield on this 8-month trade would be 9.4%, or 13.9% annualized.  The breakeven on this covered call trade is $25.52.

The potential assigned yield offers an additional $1.06/share, (3.79%), which could increase your total potential assigned yield to 13.29%, or 23.40% annualized.

Alternatively, if you wanted an even lower break-even point, you could sell cash-secured put options. Our Covered Puts table currently lists the Jan. 2011 $25 put, which was bid at $2.05 today, for an 8.2% yield in 8 months, or 12.07% annualized.

This would give you a $22.95 breakeven, which makes LLTC’s $.92/share dividend equate to a 4.1% yield. (These put-selling yields are based upon 100% cash reserve.)  LLTC closed today at $28.18.

Disclosure: No positions at this time.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

DCP Midstream Partners LP (DPM)-High Dividend Yield, Low Valuation

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

DCP Midstream Partners LP, (DPM), an oil & gas pipeline company, has one of the higher dividend yields in our High Dividend Stocks by Sector tables.  It also appears to be undervalued, and has several above-average metrics, when compared to its peers, in our Industry Comparison Table:

DPM Oil & Gas Pipeline Industry
P/E 5.38 25.00
PEG 0.45 6.91
EPS GROWTH NEXT 5 YRS. 12.00% 4.99%
ROA 10.03% 4.01%
ROE 52.79% 7.18%
ROI 12.70% 4.74%
DIVIDEND YIELD 7.99% 6.79%

DPM, which closed at $30.04 Wednesday, recently declared a $.60/share dividend, payable to shareholders of record Feb. 5th, 2010.

DPM also has covered call and put options available with double-digit annualized yields:

COVERED CALL: July 2010 $30.00 call is currently bid at $1.75, a 13% annualized yield. Covered call sellers would also collect $.60/share in dividends, for an additional 4.47% annualized yield.

CASH-SECURED PUT: July 2010 $30.00 put is currently bid at $2.35, a 17.5% annualized yield, (based on a 100% cash reserve).

Disclosure: Author doesn’t own DPM shares.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

Alexandria Real Estate (ARE)- 4 High Dividend & Option Yields

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Alexandria Real Estate Equities REIT, (ARE), is the largest landlord for biotech firms in the U.S., which makes it a play on Healthcare.Although its common stock dividend is not very high, (currently a 2.26% dividend yield), there are 4 ways to achieve high single and double-digit yields from this stock:

1.With its juicy options, ARE is listed in our Covered Call tables, with a 14%-plus current yield on its July $65 calls, which are currently bid at $4.20. (ARE closed at $61.88 Friday).

The potential assigned yield for selling these covered calls 10.58% annualized, giving you a total potential yield of 27.19%.

2. Our Covered Put tables list $60 July covered puts at a $5.00 bid, for a 17.50 % annualized yield. (This yield is based on a 100% cash reserve.)

3. Alexandria has a preferred  stock,  AREEP, a cumulative convertible series D stock, that pays $1.75/share per year, in quarterly payments. AREEP is now at $21.75, and has a 7.97% yield. It’s callable in 2013 at $25.

4. Alexandria has another preferred stock, AREPC, a cumulative convertible series C stock, that pays $2.09/share per year, in quarterly payments. Note: This preferred stock is now callable at ANY TIME at $25/share, and it closed at $25 on Friday. This dividend yield is 8.36%.

Note: Many of the free finance sites have very sketchy info on preferred stocks. The online brokerage sites may provide better and more details.

Disclosure: Author long ARE preferred shares

Disclaimer: This article was written for informational purposes only.

Banco Santander, (STD) – A Backdoor Into Brazil – Nov. 12, 2009

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Although our High Dividend Stocks by Sector Tables don’t break out foreign stocks, there are still some impressive foreign dividend paying stocks to be found there.  Spain’s Banco Santander, (STD), is the biggest Eurozone bank, and has fared much better than most other megabanks during the crisis, partially as a result of stringent Spanish banking laws forcing it to avoid toxic assets.

Overall, it appears to be one of the best stocks in the financial sector.

While other big banks have been forced to curtail spending, Banco Santander raised $7 billion to fund additional Brazilian expansion, by selling a minority stake its Brazilian operation .  It’s currently the number 3 bank in Brazil, and it has targeted the hottest area for Brazilian GDP growth – the southern region near Sao Paolo.

Business Week reports that, “Brazil accounted for more than one-fifth of Santander’s $6.8 billion in “attributable profit,” or net minus capital gains, in the first half of this year. (Attributable profit is the only earnings measure for which the bank provides a breakdown by country.)

That’s up from just 11% for the same period in 2008. Analysts say the change is due primarily to the consolidation of Brazil’s Banco Real, which Santander bought for $16 billion in 2007 as part of the ill-fated takeover and carve-up of Dutch financial giant ABN Amro by Santander, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Fortis.”

“While RBS and Fortis have struggled ever since, Santander’s gamble paid off handsomely. Its expanded footprint in Brazil helped offset the bank’s slowing operations in other regions—particularly Spain and Britain—during the worst of the downturn.  Lending in Brazil, for instance, jumped 16% during the first half of 2009, compared with just 1% in Spain over the same period.”

STD also has options available.  Investors wanting to improve upon the dividend yield could sell covered calls.  The March 2010 $17.50 call option for STD listed in our Covered Call Table is currently worth a $1.15 bid.  In addition, you’d qualify for $.16/share in dividends during that period.   At STD’s closing price of $17.23, this would equal a 7.6% static yield for just over 4 months, or 21.00%-plus annualized.

Conversely, if you’re feeling skeptical about STD’s current price, which is only 2% below its 52-week high, you may want to look at selling cash-secured Put options against STD.  The March $15.00 put that’s currently listed in our Covered Put Table is bid at $.75, which equals over 14% annualized.  The breakeven is $14.25.

Investors should be aware that selling covered calls necessitates buying the underlying stock before selling calls against it.  When selling cash-secured puts, check your broker’s cash reserve rules – some brokers require a cash reserve equal to 100% of the underlying shares value, while others may require less cash up front.

Disclosure: No Positions

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

The Top 4 Healthcare Dividend Stocks – Covered Call Trades – Nov. 6th, 2009

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Starting with picks from the Healthcare section of our High Dividend Stocks by Sector tables, we ran a screen for Healthcare stocks with the highest yields from a combination of the highest dividend yield and covered call options.

We came up with the following 4 firms:

Company

11/05/09 Price

Dividend/Share (pre-expiration)

Dividend %

Covered Call Expiration/ Strike Price

Covered Call Options/Premium

Covered Call %

Total Nominal Static Yields

Annualized Yields

Astra Zeneca (AZN)

$44.82

$1.50

3.35%

April $45

$2.60

5.80%

9.15%

21.95%

Merck (MRK)

$32.83

$0.76

2.31%

April $34

$1.80

5.48%

7.80%

18.71%

Lilly (LLY)

$34.39

$0.49

1.42%

April $35

$1.95

5.67%

7.10%

17.03%

Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK)

$40.33

$0.98

2.43%

May $42.50

$1.90

4.71%

7.14%

14.28%

Within this group, Astra Zeneca and Merck also appear to have the best combination of debt load, management effectiveness, and valuation ratios.  As always with high profile stocks, there may be many other contributing factors that will weigh upon these companies’ futures.  This is particularly true in the Healthcare industry, with the advent of a major healthcare reform bill in the U.S., plus periodic FDA drug reviews, and litigation that often move big pharma stocks’ prices.  In addition, this industry has been undergoing consolidation recently, as firms move to shore up their drug pipelines.

If you’re skeptical about the future of Healthcare stocks, but you still want to “nip at the edges” for profits, you might consider selling cash-secured puts against the ones your research pinpoints as the best stocks.

There are some current put yields on display for some of these and other sectors’ stocks in our Covered Puts Table .

Disclosure: No positions

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only.

The Dividend Aristocrat With The Highest Dividend Yield -Aug. 8, 2009

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

When looking for the best stocks, always keep an eye on the dividend.  Long gone are the tech bubble days, when dividends were thought to be unimportant, when compared to the meteoric price appreciation of dot.com stocks.

Century Tel tops this elite list with its 8.9%-plus dividend yield.  Let’s look at some numbers: Click here… to continue reading…