2 Reasons to Buy British American Tobacco Stock at the End of 2024 and 2 Reasons to Avoid It for Now

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As 2024 comes to a close, British American Tobacco’s (NYSE: BTI) stock is sitting on a roughly 25% year-to-date price gain. That’s a pretty rapid advance, particularly for a company that is largely viewed as an income investment, with most of the rally happening over a six-month period, between April and September.

Is this cigarette maker worth buying after the price advance, or is there now even more reason to avoid the stock? Here’s a look at four key issues you need to consider when making your call.

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The one thing that has likely drawn most investors to British American Tobacco is still the biggest reason to like the stock: its dividend yield. Even after this year’s price advance, the yield is still 8%, which is far better than the S&P 500 index’s 1.2% or the average consumer staples stock’s yield of about 2.5% (based on the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF as a proxy for the industry).

Image source: Getty Images.

Clearly, if you are looking to generate as much income as possible from your investments, British American Tobacco is a consumer staples business worth looking at. Also notable on this front, the British company shifted to paying dividends quarterly in 2018 and has, since that point, increased its annual payment every year (in British pounds). With this stock, it would be difficult to find anything to complain about when it comes to the income stream it produces.

The dividend, however, must be juxtaposed against the company’s business, which is largely selling cigarettes. Its core tobacco business has not been performing well. To be fair, no cigarette maker has been doing all that well lately. But it is important to understand what is going on.

In the first half of 2024, British American Tobacco sold 6.8% fewer cigarettes than it did in the same period of 2023. In 2023, cigarette volumes declined by 5.3%. And in 2022, they witnessed a 5.1% volume drop. So it’s no surprise that the stock had taken a beating in in 2022 and 2023 with the market cap decline more than 40% at one point. This is not the type of trend you see from a healthy business.

British American Tobacco, like its peers, has offset its volume declines with price increases, resulting in increased profits this year and a corresponding stock rally. Given the addictive nature of nicotine, smokers are a fairly loyal and reliable customer group.

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