Wall Street is confident high-yielding banks won't cut their dividends

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Wall Street is confident high-yielding banks won't cut their dividends
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Analysts have issued dozens of research reports since Silicon Valley Bank went under. Virtually none of them so much as mention the word dividend.

Forget about Treasury bills or certificates of deposit. Just look at the fat dividend yields now on offer among regional banks after the March meltdown triggered by the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and Silvergate Capital. KeyCorp , an $11 billion market cap bank based in Cleveland, yielded 6.4% as of the Tuesday market close. Atlanta's Truist Financial now yields 6.2% while Minneapolis's U.S. Bancorp pays 5.1% on its common stock. The list goes on and on.

earnings will rise 20% as a result of the acquisition, and its book value expand by 15%. yielded 7.4% at Tuesday's close. Little to no dividend growth The conventional wisdom today is that the pressure on bank profits makes the outlook for dividend growth in the sector more dicey, rather than jeopardizing the safety of current payouts.

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