Years of Rewards: $43 Bil From Qualcomm Stock

-22.08%
Downside
233
Market
182
Trefis
QCOM: Qualcomm logo
QCOM
Qualcomm

In the last five years, Qualcomm (QCOM) stock has returned $43 Bil back to its shareholders through cold, hard cash via dividends and buybacks. Let’s look at some numbers and compare how this payout power stacks up against the market’s biggest capital-return machines.

As it turns out, QCOM stock has returned the 34th highest amount to shareholders in history.

  QCOM S&P Median
Dividends $18 Bil $3.0 Bil
Share Repurchase $26 Bil $3.0 Bil
Total Returned $43 Bil $6.0 Bil
Total Returned as % of Current Market Cap 17.5% 17.0%

Why should you care? Because dividends and share repurchases represent direct, tangible returns of capital to shareholders. They also signal management’s confidence in the company’s financial health and ability to generate sustainable cash flows. And there are more stocks like that. Here is a list of the top 10 companies ranked by total capital returned to shareholders via dividends and stock repurchases.

Top 10 Stocks By Total Shareholder Return

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  6. Qualcomm Stock To $340?

  Total Money Returned As % Of Current Market Cap via Dividends via Share Repurchases
AAPL $508 Bil 11.1% $76 Bil $432 Bil
GOOGL $288 Bil 6.1% $20 Bil $268 Bil
MSFT $223 Bil 7.3% $108 Bil $115 Bil
JPM $181 Bil 22.2% $72 Bil $108 Bil
XOM $157 Bil 25.3% $79 Bil $78 Bil
META $156 Bil 9.7% $12 Bil $145 Bil
BAC $129 Bil 34.7% $45 Bil $84 Bil
NVDA $116 Bil 2.2% $3.1 Bil $113 Bil
CVX $116 Bil 32.0% $58 Bil $57 Bil
WFC $108 Bil 46.0% $23 Bil $85 Bil

For full ranking, visit Buybacks & Dividends Ranking

What do you notice here? The total capital returned to shareholders as a % of the current market cap appears inversely proportional to growth prospects for reinvestments. Stocks like Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) are growing much faster, in a more predictable way, compared to the others, but they have returned a much lower fraction of their market cap to shareholders.

That’s the flip side to high capital returns. Sure, they are attractive, but you have to ask yourself the question: Am I sacrificing growth and sound fundamentals?

Qualcomm Fundamentals

  • Revenue Growth: 5.2% LTM and 3.3% last 3-year average.
  • Cash Generation: Nearly 28.1% free cash flow margin and 25.6% operating margin LTM.
  • Recent Revenue Shocks: The minimum annual revenue growth in the last 3 years for QCOM was -11.4%.
  • Valuation: Qualcomm stock trades at a P/E multiple of 25.1

  QCOM S&P Median
Sector Information Technology
Industry Semiconductors
PE Ratio 25.1 23.9

   
LTM* Revenue Growth 5.2% 7.4%
3Y Average Annual Revenue Growth 3.3% 5.7%
Min Annual Revenue Growth Last 3Y -11.4% 0.6%

   
LTM* Operating Margin 25.6% 18.4%
3Y Average Operating Margin 26.0% 18.3%
LTM* Free Cash Flow Margin 28.1% 14.4%

*LTM: Last Twelve Months

The table gives a good overview of what you get from QCOM stock vs median S&P 500, but comparing against its own peers is just as important.

QCOM Historical Risk

There is no free lunch. When it comes to buybacks and dividends, shareholders get rewarded for “staying invested”. And that is not easy. Even the strongest conviction gets tested during volatile market phases, and is best illustrated by understanding how low QCOMstock has fallen during the past market crises.

Staying Invested Matters If You Want Returns

Staying invested in markets is the only way to get returns. The mechanism does not matter. Whether it is fundamental price appreciation, share buybacks or dividends, the market does not reward you for watching from the sidelines. So how do you invest, and stay invested? Simple. Through “Portfolio” approach.

The Trefis High Quality Portfolio (HQ) Portfolio is designed to keep you in the game. By spreading your exposure across 30 quality stocks, it neutralizes the “all-or-nothing” risk of a single stock. It dampens the sharp, stomach-churning drops while maintaining upside exposure.