Attica Holdings Dividend
Dividend criteria checks 2/6
Attica Holdings is a dividend paying company with a current yield of 2.83% that is well covered by earnings. Next payment date is on 12th June, 2024 with an ex-dividend date of 5th June, 2024.
Key information
2.8%
Dividend yield
25%
Payout ratio
Industry average yield | 6.2% |
Next dividend pay date | 12 Jun 24 |
Ex dividend date | 05 Jun 24 |
Dividend per share | n/a |
Earnings per share | €0.25 |
Dividend yield forecast in 3Y | n/a |
Recent dividend updates
Recent updates
Attica Holdings' (ATH:ATTICA) Solid Profits Have Weak Fundamentals
Apr 18Is Attica Holdings (ATH:ATTICA) Using Debt In A Risky Way?
Feb 04Is Attica Holdings (ATH:ATTICA) A Risky Investment?
Oct 20Health Check: How Prudently Does Attica Holdings (ATH:ATTICA) Use Debt?
Jan 18Attica Holdings (ATH:ATTICA) Has A Somewhat Strained Balance Sheet
Apr 04Update: Attica Holdings (ATH:ATTICA) Stock Gained 84% In The Last Five Years
Dec 17Upcoming Dividend Payment
Stability and Growth of Payments
Fetching dividends data
Stable Dividend: Whilst dividend payments have been stable, ATTICA has been paying a dividend for less than 10 years.
Growing Dividend: ATTICA's dividend payments have increased, but the company has only paid a dividend for 2 years.
Dividend Yield vs Market
Attica Holdings Dividend Yield vs Market |
---|
Segment | Dividend Yield |
---|---|
Company (ATTICA) | 2.8% |
Market Bottom 25% (GR) | 2.2% |
Market Top 25% (GR) | 5.9% |
Industry Average (Shipping) | 6.2% |
Analyst forecast in 3 Years (ATTICA) | n/a |
Notable Dividend: ATTICA's dividend (2.83%) is higher than the bottom 25% of dividend payers in the Greek market (2.16%).
High Dividend: ATTICA's dividend (2.83%) is low compared to the top 25% of dividend payers in the Greek market (5.89%).
Earnings Payout to Shareholders
Earnings Coverage: With its low payout ratio (24.9%), ATTICA's dividend payments are well covered by earnings.
Cash Payout to Shareholders
Cash Flow Coverage: With its high cash payout ratio (172.1%), ATTICA's dividend payments are not well covered by cash flows.