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Topic: Dividend Stocks

These two tech giants just raised their dividends


Intel LISTEN:  

Recent changes to the U.S. tax code have let Microsoft and Intel tap their large overseas cash balances at a much lower tax rate. That cash will help fuel their growth, and lead to more dividend hikes.

MICROSOFT CORP. $91 (Nasdaq symbol MSFT; High- Growth Dividend Payer Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 7.7 billion; Market cap: $700.7 billion; Dividend yield: 1.8%; Dividend Sustainability Rating: Highest; www.microsoft.com) is the world’s largest software company. Its Windows operating system powers about 90% of the world’s personal computers.

The company last raised its quarterly payment by 7.6% in December 2017, to $0.42 a share from $0.39. The new annual rate of $1.68 yields 1.8%.

Microsoft’s recent growth mostly stems from its 2014 decision to shift to cloud-computing services: Instead of buying its software as a one-time purchase, clients now access that software online through subscriptions. They can also store data files using remote servers.

In the fiscal 2018 second quarter, ended December 31, 2017, the company’s revenue rose 12.0%, to $28.9 billion from $25.8 billion a year earlier. Revenue at its Intelligent Cloud segment jumped 15.3%, while revenue for its Productivity and Business Processes business, which includes its cloudbased Office suite of business programs, jumped 24.7%.

The company lost $6.3 billion, or $0.82 a share, in the quarter. That’s entirely due to a $13.8 billion charge stemming from the new U.S. tax rules. Without that item, its earnings improved 19.6%, to $7.5 billion from $6.3 billion a year earlier. Due to fewer shares outstanding, earnings per share rose 20.0%, to $0.96 from $0.80.

The stock trades at 28.5 times the $3.19 a share Microsoft should earn in fiscal 2018. That’s a reasonable multiple in light of the company’s fast-growing cloud business.

Microsoft is a buy. 

INTEL CORP. $46 (Nasdaq symbol INTC; Conservative Growth Dividend Payer Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 4.7 billion; Market cap: $216.2 billion; Dividend yield: 2.6%; Dividend Sustainability Rating: Above Average; www.intel.com) is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 80% of all personal computers.

Starting with the March 2018 payment, shareholders receive quarterly dividends of $0.30 a share, up 10.1% from $0.2725. The new annual rate of $1.20 yields 2.6%.

To cut its reliance on cyclical demand for personal computers, Intel has diversified into other types of chips.

For example, the company recently acquired Mobileye N.V. for $15.3 billion. Based in Israel, Mobileye specializes in computer systems and chips for self-driving cars. Over 25 automakers currently use, or have agreed to use, its technology. Intel expects global demand for vehicle systems and data services to rise as high as $70 billion by 2030.

Thanks partly to that purchase, Intel’s revenue in the three months ended December 31, 2017, rose 4.1%, to a record $17.1 billion from $16.4 billion a year earlier.

Due to the new U.S. tax rules, the company had an income tax expense of $5.4 billion. That includes a onetime transition tax on previously untaxed foreign earnings.

As a result, Intel lost $687.0 million, or $0.15 a share, in the quarter. A year earlier, it earned $3.6 billion, or $0.74 a share. If you exclude all unusual items, earnings per share jumped 36.7%, to $1.08 from $0.79.

Intel will probably earn $3.30 a share in 2018. The stock trades at 13.9 times that forecast. That’s a particularly attractive multiple, as the company spends a high 19% of its revenue on research. That hurts its current earnings and inflates its p/e.

Intel is a buy.

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