Is This Double-Digit Yielder Safe?


Back in June, I covered one of the most requested stocks in this column, Prospect Capital Corp. (Nasdaq: PSEC).

At the time, the stock received an F rating for dividend safety because of a history of dividend cuts and falling net investment income (NII), a measure of cash flow used by business development companies.

Two months later, Prospect Capital slashed its dividend 28% to $0.06 per share monthly from $0.083.

In the most recent quarter, NII fell 24% from last year and 18% for the full fiscal year, which ended in June.

If Prospect Capital grows its NII next year, it will be eligible for an upgrade. But until then, its history of cutting the dividend and delivering lower cash flow means the current dividend is still at risk.

You can read my analysis from June below…

Without a doubt, I get more requests to analyze the dividend safety of Prospect Capital Corp. (Nasdaq: PSEC) than I do for any other stock.

The monthly dividend that yields 12.5% annually is a big reason for that.
[Update: As of October 13, Prospect Capital’s yield was 11.4%.]

But should shareholders expect to continue to receive that $0.083 per share dividend every month?

Let’s see what SafetyNet Pro thinks…

Prospect Capital is a business development company (BDC) that invests in debt and equity across a wide range of businesses and industries. It has more than $6 billion in assets and has funded more than 300 businesses.

The first things that jump out at me (and SafetyNet Pro) are two dividend cuts, one in 2010 and another in 2015.

To me, there is nothing worse for a dividend payer than a management team that cuts the dividend. And if the dividend has been reduced more than once, that is a strong signal that management won’t hesitate to do it again…

So those are two big strikes against it – even before we look at the fundamentals.

The financials aren’t too bad. In 2016, the company generated $590 million in net interest income (NII), the best measure of cash flow for a BDC. During the year, it paid out $336 million for a very manageable payout ratio of 57%.

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