2 Companies That Raised Their Dividends This Week
Insurance holding company Globe Life and media firm Tegna declared dividend increases this week.
Several other companies said they would maintain their payouts at current levels, but it was a fairly quiet week for official dividend announcements.
Globe Life (ticker: GL), based in McKinney, Texas, plans to boost its quarterly disbursement on its common stock by a penny, or about 5%, to 19.75 cents a share.
The stock, which yields 0.8%, has a one-return of around 50%, dividends included. The company specializes in life and supplemental health insurance for middle-income customers in the U.S.
Tegna (TGNA), whose assets include television stations, said it plans to boost its annual dividend by about 36%. The quarterly dividend, payable on July 1 to stockholders of record at the close of business on June 4, will be 9.5 cents a share, up from 7 cents.
The stock, which yields 1.4%, has a one-year return of about 75%.
Several companies said they plan to keep their dividends at current levels.
Retailer TJX (TJX) declared a quarterly dividend of 26 cents a share, the same amount as in the previous quarter. Due to the pandemic, the company suspended its dividend last year, but reinstated it in November at 26 cents a share—above the 23 cents a share it had been paying before the pandemic.
The stock, which has a one-year return of about 50%, yields 1.6%.
McCormick (MKC), which makes spices, seasoning mixes, and other related products, plans to keep its quarterly disbursement at 34 cents a share.
McCormick is a member of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats, all of which have paid out a higher dividend for at least 25 consecutive years.
The stock has a one-year return of about 25%, and it yields 1.5%.
Simon Property Group (SPG) plans to maintain its quarterly dividend at $1.30 a share.
The Indianapolis-based company, which operates as a real estate investment trust, owns a lot of higher-end malls around the country.
It did slash its quarterly dividend during the pandemic last year from $2.10 a share to $1.30—but it has maintained it at that level since then. The stock, which yields 4.5%, has a one-year return of about 175%.
Write to Lawrence C. Strauss at [email protected]