1 Reason to Buy These 2 Fierce Rivals

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • Both Ford and General Motors return significant value to shareholders, albeit in different ways.

  • Ford's dividend yields nearly 4.5%, and the company often dishes out supplemental dividends.

  • General Motors has announced $16 billion in share buybacks since 2023 -- a different approach.

  • 10 stocks we like better than General Motors ›

When it comes to designing, producing, and selling highly profitable full-size trucks and SUVs, there may not be two closer rivals than Detroit's own Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) and General Motors (NYSE: GM). Though fierce rivals in vehicle segments, the two automakers share a core value of returning significant value to shareholders.

Let's dive into how and why the automakers approach returning value differently, and why it's a big win for long-term investors.

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Paying you direct

One popular reason investors have for scooping up shares of Ford is the automaker's high-yield dividend. In fact, Ford offers investors a combination of value, as the company trades at a modest price-to-earnings ratio of 11, as well as a dividend yield of 4.4% -- much higher than the S&P 500's average yield of just over 1.1%.

The difference a dividend can make in a long-term investment is significant. Take Ford, for instance. Over the past decade you can see the modest share price returns compared to the much larger total value returns that include dividends.

F Chart

F data by YCharts

One unique aspect of Ford's dividend is that the interests of the Ford family are aligned with shareholders'. That's because the automaker has a special class of shares held by the Ford family that come with not only the common dividend but also substantial voting rights. It's well known that the Ford family enjoys the significant payout, and would prefer the company's dividend payments remain consistent and strong.

Ford is aiming to return 40% to 50% of its annual free cash flow (FCF) to shareholders through its quarterly dividends, as well as its supplemental dividends that it will dish out to shareholders during years of stronger FCF. The upside is that when Ford can reverse billions in electric vehicle losses in the near to medium term, more cash will be freed up for potential dividend increases.

A different path

While Ford focuses on its lucrative dividend to return value to shareholders, rival General Motors drives down a different path. Rather than pay shareholders directly with dividends, GM focuses on stock buybacks to boost per-share earnings. For investors it's not important that GM is returning value to shareholders differently than its rival, but it is important for investors to understand just how substantial the automaker's share buybacks have been.

General Motors' Hummer.

Image source: General Motors.

General Motors is clicking on all cylinders, having just beaten Wall Street estimates during the fourth quarter, announcing a 20% increase to its quarterly dividend, and initiating a brand-new $6 billion share repurchase authorization.

It's not a new move for the Detroit automaker. Since the beginning of 2023, GM has announced $22 billion in share buybacks and retired hundreds of thousands of shares outstanding. To put that information in context, it's best to view the company's significant decline in shares outstanding, which coincides with a rising share price over that time period.

GM Chart

GM data by YCharts

What it all means

Currently, one primary reason to invest in Ford or General Motors is their commitment to returning significant value to shareholders, whether it's a lucrative dividend payment or significant share repurchases. For investors, the fact that these two automakers return so much value to shareholders is proof the companies are confident in their current investments for profitable growth and can maintain a strong balance sheet.

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Daniel Miller has positions in Ford Motor Company and General Motors. The Motley Fool recommends General Motors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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