📰 YAHOO NEWS

This Powerhouse Financial Stock Just Declared a 15% Dividend Raise. Is It Time to Buy?

Another year, another dividend raise. That has been the strategy of payment card giant Mastercard (NYSE: MA) for over a decade now, and in December it maintained that tradition with another increase in its payout for stockholders. The increase was accompanied by news of a massive stock buyback program, so Mastercard will spend much of 2025 doling out capital for stock price-supporting measures.

Let’s unpack whether these changes support the buy case for the company.

Mastercard announced this latest dividend raise in mid-December. The company said it is boosting its quarterly distribution by $0.10, or 15%, to $0.76 per share. This is to be dispensed on Feb. 7 to investors of record as of Jan. 9.

A 15% increase sounds impressive on the surface, as most dividend raises from large, publicly traded companies tend to fall in the single-digit percentage range. Yet there are two factors here that make it a “more of the same,” situation for Mastercard.

First, the company typically hikes its payout at low-double-digit rates. After all, it continues to work from a relatively low base — when it initiated its dividend in 2006, its first quarterly disbursement was $0.09. Even now, at well under $1 per share, even a bump of $0.10 makes for a disproportionate leap in percentage terms.

Second, Mastercard remains a relatively miserly dividend payer. Even with the new raise, the dividend yield calculates out to less than 0.6% on the stock’s most recent closing price. The average of S&P 500 index component companies is more than double that percentage, at over 1.2%.

Then there is the fact that the dividend raise is eclipsed by yet another massive share buyback program launched by the company.

Concurrent with the payout hike announcement, Mastercard revealed that its board of directors has approved a fresh stock repurchase initiative totaling up to $12 billion, which is $1 billion higher than the previous authorization (enacted in December 2023). That’s an awful lot of buyback funding, and it will help greatly when and if the company’s share price needs a boost.

Mastercard has this kind of cash to throw around because its business is enormous and profitable.

One key reason for this is that, like its eternal competitor Visa, it does not provide the credit that funds the transactions on its cards. It’s an “open loop” operator, as such companies are known in the card business, meaning that it functions only as a processor of transactions made through its networks. Banks and other companies are the ones actually providing the “short-term loans” for the transacting cardholders.


Source link

Back to top button