How is the Telstra dividend yield looking by historical standards?

We run the figures to see if the Telstra dividend yield has changed over time.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

Key points
  • Telstra has long been an ASX dividend heavyweight
  • But the company's share price and dividends have fluctuated quite a lot over the past decade
  • We check how the company's yields today compare to their historical levels

Telstra Corporation Ltd (ASX: TLS) shares have always been famous for the dividend income they pay ASX investors. Since Telstra's privatisation in the 1990s, the telco has doled out dividends to its grateful investors. This reputation has spanned decades now, even as the dividends paid out from the company have fluctuated dramatically.

As it stands today, Telstra offers up a trailing dividend yield of 4.21%, based on the current share price of $3.92 and the trailing annual dividend of 16.5 cents per share. Not too shabby from an objective point of view, one could say. But how does this dividend yield compare to what Telstra has offered up in the past?

To answer this question, let's analyse Telstra's historical closing share prices against the trailing dividend yield calculated from the dividends the company was paying at the time:

Telstra Dividend Yield
Chart: Author's Own | Data: Telstra.com.au

So the first thing to note is that Telstra's dividends have changed quite a lot over the past 10 years. Back in 2012, the company was paying two sets of 14 cents per share dividends every year. Around this time ten years ago, Telstra was going for just over $4 a share. That gave the company a dividend yield of approximately 6.8%.

But this dividend yield spent the next few years on the slide, thanks mostly to the company's rising share price. By late 2014, Telstra shares were trading at around $5.50. Even though Telstra's raw dividends ticked up from an annual 28 cents per share to 28.5 cents by then, the company's yield was down to around 5.1%.

a young boy dressed in a business suit and wearing thick black glasses peers straight ahead while sitting at a heavy wooden desk with an old-fashioned calculator and adding machine while holding a pen over a large ledger book.

Image source: Getty Images

When did the Telstra dividend yield peak?

Telstra's raw dividends peaked at 31 cents per share in early 2016 and stayed at that level until 2018. But when investors got wind that the company was about to dramatically trim its dividends in late 2017 and early 2018, the Telstra share price began falling dramatically. It dropped from around $4 in September 2017 to a low of $2.65 or so by mid-2018.

This saw Telstra's trailing dividend yield soar to almost 10%, but this soon dropped as well when the new Telstra dividends kicked in. It got to around the 4% mark, where it has stayed pretty much ever since. The only notable exception is the COVID market crash of 2020.

Like most ASX shares, Telstra saw its share price crater during this period. It went under $3 in May 2020 and again dipped to around $2.70 in October of that year.

Since Telstra didn't actually cut its dividend at all in 2020, these drops saw the yield spike to around 6% at the time.

But we can conclude that the Telstra dividend yield today is pretty much at the same level investors have been enjoying for years now. However, it is also not even close to the highs that investors enjoyed in years gone by.

Motley Fool contributor Sebastian Bowen has positions in Telstra Corporation Limited. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Telstra Corporation Limited. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Dividend Investing

A man holding a cup of coffee puts his thumb up and smiles while at laptop.
Dividend Investing

Buy Macquarie and this ASX 200 passive income share: analysts

These could be the shares to buy if you want a passive income boost.

Read more »

ATM with Australian hundred dollar notes hanging out.
Dividend Investing

4 ASX 200 shares trading ex-dividend on Wednesday

These ASX 200 shares will be rewarding their shareholders with dividends very soon.

Read more »

A woman wearing glasses and a black top smiles broadly as she stares at a money yarn full of coins representing the rising JB Hi-Fi share price and rising dividends over the past five years
Dividend Investing

Buy these ASX dividend shares with big yields today: experts

These ASX shares could give your passive income a major boost during the cost of living crisis.

Read more »

Two male ASX 200 analysts stand in an office looking at various computer screens showing share prices
Dividend Investing

3 ASX 200 shares trading ex-dividend on Tuesday

Expect to see these 3 ASX 200 shares drop tomorrow

Read more »

A couple sits in their lounge room with a large piggy bank on the coffee table. They smile while the male partner feeds some money into the slot while the female partner looks on with an iPad style device in her hands as though they are budgeting.
Dividend Investing

Buy these ASX dividend shares right now for income: analysts

Here's why analysts say these could be top options for income investors this month...

Read more »

A woman smiles widely while using an old fashioned hand set telephone with dial.
Dividend Investing

Here's how much I'd need to invest in Telstra shares to generate a $200 monthly income

Telstra has grown its dividends again in 2023.

Read more »

A sophisticated older lady with shoulder-length grey hair and glasses sits on her couch laughing while looking at her phone
Dividend Investing

I reckon these are 2 of the best ASX income stocks to buy in March

These look like two winners for income to me.

Read more »

Woman holding $50 notes and smiling.
Dividend Investing

Analysts name 2 ASX dividend shares to buy with 4%+ yields

These ASX dividend shares good be quality options for income investors right now.

Read more »