Hey, Google: How About a Dividend, Already? (GOOGL)

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Note to Google (GOOGL, GOOG): It’s time grow up, wear your big-boy pants and start paying a dividend.

Hey, Google: How About a Dividend, Already? (GOOGL)You’re a $374 billion company, for crying out loud, and your biggest rivals — Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) — are among the most generous dividend payers and dividend raisers in the world.

For a company that used to pride itself on its “Don’t be evil” motto, your stinginess to your long-suffering shareholders seems a little — well — evil.

Is a Google dividend really too much to ask? Let’s look at the numbers. Companies with consistent and reliable cash flows make the best dividend payers. Remember, investors who buy for dividends tend to be conservative. They hate surprises, and lumpy earnings make for an erratic dividend.

So, GOOGL, how do your earnings stack up?

Pretty well, actually. Over the past 10 years, earnings per share have grown at a nice clip with no real interruptions. Free cash flow per share, which is the more appropriate measure for gauging cash available to be paid as a dividend, has been a little lumpier as capital expenditures vary a little from year to year. But overall, GOOGL is a case study in a steadily growing business.

Hey, Google: How About a Dividend, Already? (GOOGL)

And let’s not forget about your money in the bank. You have $65 billion in cash just sitting around. That’s about 17% of your entire market cap. Seriously, what are you going to spend it on, driverless cars? Well, your $65 billion in the bank is roughly twice the entire market cap of leading auto innovator Tesla Motors (TSLA).

GOOGL could buy Tesla outright and still have plenty of cash left over for at least a modest dividend.

What would a Google dividend look like? Let’s take baby steps and start with a 10% dividend payout. You earned $14.5 billion over the trailing 12 months. A $1.5 billion initial annual dividend wouldn’t make a dent in your cash hoard.

And don’t think that paying a dividend will completely negate your ability to throw money away on silly acquisitions that add no value to GOOGL shareholders. Being a generous dividend payer certainly didn’t keep Microsoft from blowing $2.5 billion buying the maker of Minecraft last year.

I know, I know. It’s hard to admit you’re no longer a Silicon Valley startup. I get it. But you can still let your employees wear togas to work — or play foosball all day — or whatever it is you free-thinking types do over there when you’re not bumping into walls wearing Google Glass.

You’re a big boy now. And it’s time to start paying a dividend like one.

And don’t think I’ve forgotten about you, Facebook (FB). Yes, GOOGL has been doing this a lot longer and is a more mature company. But you’re a big boy too, and unlike your clueless rival Twitter (TWTR), you actually have a profitable business model in place.

A Facebook dividend would be a very pleasant surprise, and it would assuage investors’ biggest fear: That you are burning far too much of your cash on capital spending with no guarantee of benefit. Your expenses jumped by 83% last quarter.

Hey, I get it. You’re investing in the future, and your revenues are growing at a 40% clip. Companies at this hypergrowth stage can’t be bothered with paying a dividend. But if you did, your investors might be willing to give you the benefit of the doubt and stop complaining about your ballooning expenses. A dividend would symbolize that you’re a mature company and one that can be trusted to manage shareholder money responsibly.

Charles Lewis Sizemore, CFA, is the chief investment officer of investment firm Sizemore Capital Management. Click here to receive his FREE weekly e-letter covering top market insights, trends, and the best stocks and ETFs to profit from today’s best global value plays. As of this writing, he held no positions in any of the aforementioned securities.

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Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2015/06/hey-google-how-about-a-dividend-already-googl/.

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