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§ Multiples and ratios

Dividend yield

Trailing or indicated annual dividend divided by share price. The cash income return on equity, before any capital appreciation or buybacks.

Formula
Dividend yield = Annual dividend per share / Share price

Dividend yield is the annual dividend per share divided by the current share price. It captures only the cash-distributed portion of shareholder return and ignores buybacks, retained earnings reinvested at the firm's ROIC, and any capital appreciation. Yield in isolation is a poor signal: an unusually high yield often means the market is pricing in a dividend cut, while a zero yield can be entirely consistent with a high-quality compounder that returns capital exclusively through buybacks. We pair dividend yield with payout ratio, dividend coverage from free cash flow, the trailing five-year dividend growth rate, and the implied total shareholder yield (dividend yield plus net buyback yield). For income-oriented archetypes — utilities, REITs, consumer staples — dividend yield is a primary lens. For everything else, total payout yield is the more honest measure of cash returned per dollar invested.

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