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Crypto Dividend King: Is This Beaten-Down Digital Asset a Smart Buy?

Crypto Dividend King: Is This Beaten-Down Digital Asset a Smart Buy?

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-10-09 20:19:00
12
3

While traditional investors chase dividend stocks, crypto's version of passive income is quietly staging a comeback.

The Yield Farming Renaissance

Decentralized finance protocols are printing yields that make traditional dividends look like pocket change. Staking rewards, liquidity mining, and governance tokens create compound returns that bypass Wall Street's outdated distribution models.

Market Beaten But Not Broken

Recent volatility hammered crypto valuations across the board—creating entry points for assets with strong fundamentals and real utility. The smart money isn't waiting for traditional market signals.

The Blockchain Cash Flow Revolution

Forget quarterly dividend checks. Crypto's automated smart contracts distribute rewards in real-time, cutting out the corporate bureaucracy and middlemen who've been skimming profits for decades.

As one fund manager quipped: 'My crypto yields pay better than most hedge fund returns—and I don't have to listen to their quarterly earnings calls.' The future of income investing isn't in boardrooms—it's on the blockchain.

Kenvue's recent financial results

Kenvue became a publicly traded company in August 2023, when it was spun off from its parent company,(JNJ 0.65%). Its former ties to J&J are what give it Dividend King status.

The split brought with it important implications for Kenvue's prospects. Kenvue is no longer in the business of developing novel pharmaceutical products like its former parent entity. Instead, it took over management of most of the well-branded over-the-counter (OTC) health products across several categories, including self-care, skin and beauty, and essential health. This includes brands like Tylenol, Motrin, Zyrtec, Benadryl, Neutragena, Band-Aid, Listerine, Visine, and Aveeno.

While pharmaceutical drugs often benefit from significant pricing power due to years of strong patent exclusivity, Kenvue's OTC items face a highly competitive environment with plenty of competitors, which limits the company's pricing power. Furthermore, many of Kenvue's products don't treat severe or life-threatening illnesses in the same manner as some of Johnson & Johnson's approved pharma therapies.

Even when Kenvue's products like Tylenol treat conditions that can disrupt people's day-to-day lives, there are, once again, plenty of generic alternatives that tend to be cheaper. Its big advantage is that many of Kenvue's brands are well-known and respected household names.

But this appeal alone hasn't helped the company improve its financial results. In the second quarter, Kenvue's net sales declined by 4% year over year to $3.8 billion. The company's adjusted earnings per share came in at $0.29, lower than the $0.32 reported in the prior-year quarter. Importantly, all three of Kenvue's business segments reported declining sales during the period.

What does the future hold?

It's worth pointing out why Johnson & Johnson decided to split with Kenvue in the first place. The pharmaceutical giant's consumer health division (which eventually became Kenvue) was posting slow and inconsistent revenue growth (at best) and was not performing as well as the rest of the business. Kenvue has not managed to reverse that trend since going public.

KVUE Revenue (Quarterly) Chart

Data by YCharts.

The company is working through some other issues as well. It had a change in leadership when its CEO, Thibaut Mongon, stepped down in July. Kenvue appointed Kirk Perry, a member of its board of directors, as interim CEO. While Perry does have significant experience in the consumer-packaged goods field, Kenvue is still seeking a permanent CEO. The MOVE was part of Kenvue's "broad strategic review," aimed at boosting growth and improving the company's performance.

These efforts are ongoing and under the purview of Kenvue's Strategic Review Committee. The company is also looking to decrease its expenses. Last year, the healthcare specialist reduced its workforce by 4% in an effort to achieve $350 million in cost savings by 2026, which could help boost the bottom line. That's all well and good, but while Kenvue's efforts might eventually bear fruit, it's hard to bet on that right now given the state of its business.

Finally, the Health and Human Services arm of the TRUMP administration last month came out and publicly alleged that Tylenol was linked to increased autism in children (an allegation that has been strongly disputed by healthcare advocates and the company itself). How much effect this will have on sales is yet to be seen. Roughly half of the stock's 13% price drop in the past month is likely attributable to the announcement.

Kenvue's prospects look far too uncertain right now. So, even though it is a Dividend King thanks to its legacy as a former division of Johnson & Johnson, Kenvue's underlying operations don't look like the sturdy, reliable kind that dividend investors typically want and which many Dividend Kings possess. The dividend payout ratio is currently at 112% based on earnings (and 97% based on free cash flow). That high a rate can be managed over short timeframes, but is not sustainable for more than a couple of quarters. A ratio closer to 50%-70% is sustainable and indicates a healthy dividend.

Those investors in the market for excellent dividend-paying income stocks might want to instead opt for Kenvue's former parent entity, Johnson & Johnson.

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