KEY POINTS
  • Dividend stocks have traditionally been coveted by investors because they provide guaranteed returns to shareholders, typically paid out annually out of the company’s profits or reserves.
  • That investment strategy is now struggling as companies including HSBC, Standard Chartered, Airbus, and Rolls Royce are suspending or cutting dividend payments due to the economic and market disruption caused by the coronavirus outbreak.
  • “Companies with high sustainable cash flow, in traditional yielding sectors such as telecom, infrastructure & real estate investment trusts, are not expected to cut dividends, so when they do, it is a shock to investors,” Sat Duhra, co-fund manager Asian dividend income strategy at asset manager Janus Henderson told CNBC.
Traders work during the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 19, 2020, at Wall Street in New York City.

A pronounced economic slump sparked by the coronavirus outbreak has imperiled a popular investment strategy: buying dividend stocks.

These stocks have traditionally been highly coveted during periods of market turbulence because they provide shareholders a dividend or a guaranteed return, typically paid out annually out of the company's profits or reserves.