For buy and hold dividend-paying
stock investors like ourselves, Canadian banks have traditionally been safe
bets in terms of continuing to provide a steadily increasing source of income. Dating
back to the period after the Great Depression, the banks in general have shied away from cutting their
dividends despite numerous recessions and economic downturns. In fact over the past several decades, all 5
“big banks” plus National Bank have consistently raised their dividends
annually, just like clockwork.
The COVID19 pandemic brought on a
good news/bad news situation, depending on your perspective. The good news is that despite enduring over 1.5 years of lockdowns, job losses and business closures that brought instability
and uncertainty to the economy, none of the banks cut their dividends. The bad
news is that during this same timeframe, the OFSI (Canada’s banking watchdog)
has prevented the banks from increasing their dividends in order to ensure the
financial health of the banking system. This has continued despite the banks
all generating better than expected profits and accumulating huge levels of excess capital.
Now with the lockdowns coming to
an end across the country and the economy rebounding, investors are anxiously
awaiting the easing of these restrictions on the banks, although the
possibility of the Delta variant triggering a dreaded fourth wave and another
lockdown may put a damper to these hopes.
Dividend declarations for the banks have already been made for the first
3 quarters of 2021 without any dividend raises.
The 4th quarter dividend declarations for each of the banks
should occur around the end of August, with Ex-Dates (the date before which you
need buy a stock in order to qualify for the upcoming dividend payout) ranging
between end of September to end of October, and the payout dates from October
to November. This will be the last chance
for the banks to increase their dividends for 2021, and if they do come, the
payouts are likely be larger than normal to make up for the missed increases of
the past two years.
If and when banks are allowed to
resume their raising of dividend payouts, it will be interesting to see how
they do it. There have been talks of
increases in the range of 13-20%, when prior to COVID, the annual increases
were around 3%. To me, it seems more
likely that a huge dividend boost would be paid out as a one-time special
payout rather than a straight dividend raise.
As history has shown, once a bank raises its dividend, it does not
decrease it again, come hell or high water or even pandemic. If the banks raised their dividends by
double-digits, future raises would compound upon this. Giving out a special dividend to reduce the
excess coffers, on top of the normal 3% raise, seems much more reasonable and
sustainable. Regardless of how it is
done, there seems to be a large (but potentially one-time) increase in income
coming our way, since we hold stock in all 5 big banks plus National Bank.
This leads to an interesting
quandary for us with regards to our annual RRIF withdrawals, our taxable income
for the year, and the resultant tax bracket that we will end up in. In a normal year, we can come pretty close to
predicting what our net income will be, since our income consists of the
dividends paid out from our non-registered account (which we split equally),
plus the annual mandated withdrawal that we make from our individual RRIF
accounts. We can roughly guess what the
dividend payout from the non-registered will be by assuming a small increase
fueled mostly by the dependable dividend-raising stalwarts that we own, including banks, telco, and railways.
We usually withdraw more than the
government-mandated annual minimum from our RRIFs since our goal is to reduce
the size of our RRIFs by the time we are 70 to minimize Old Age Security (OAS) claw-back. Balanced against this goal is the need to
keep our taxable income below the higher tax brackets in order to keep our
income tax owed at a reasonable level. By deciding
which tax bracket we want to stay within, we can work backwards to determine
how much we can withdraw from our RRIFs.
I use the previous year’s StudioTax online tax program to help make this determination.
In the past we would usually do
this calculation at the beginning of a new year and make an early RRIF
withdrawal. Since our early retirement
in 2012, we have been taking out stock-in-kind from our RRIFs as opposed to
cash, continually increasing the dividend income coming from our non-registered
account. Having done this for almost 10
years, we are now in a position to fund all normal expenses just from that
dividend income. Now the annual RRIF
withdrawals just act as further on-going “boosts” to that income to help combat
inflation. The earlier in the year we
make the RRIF withdrawal, the sooner we can start adding the additional
dividend payouts to our income for the year.
This year, knowing that the
dividend flood-gates may be unleashed, we only took out the government-mandated
minimum for our RRIF withdrawals. As we have done the previous 3 quarters, we
will wait for the 4th quarter dividend declarations by the banks
before determining whether we should make a second RRIF withdrawal and if so,
how much. If the bank dividend increases
are declared, we can recalculate the projected income that our non-registered
account will produce. Doing so will
protect us from taking too much out from our RRIFs and inadvertently bumping us
into higher tax brackets.
If the restrictions on the banks continue through this next round of dividend declarations, then we will know that no raises will come this year. But sooner or later, they will come, so we would take the same precautions next year. Not exactly a bad “problem” to have!