7.4% Dividend Yield? Here’s a Dividend Trap to Avoid in March

Yellow Pages (TSX:Y) is a top Canadian dividend stock that many investors focus on for its yield, but that could be a dangerous move right now.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Yellow Pages (TSX:Y) faces challenges with declining digital and print revenues, raising concerns about its long-term growth and dividend sustainability.
  • With a high dividend payout ratio exceeding 100% and potential earnings decline, Yellow Pages risks becoming a dividend trap despite its attractive yield.

With so many top-tier dividend stocks to choose from on the TSX, I focus most of my time and attention on finding the absolute best pick for investors. That said, there’s also the inverse, which can be true: with so many top high-yielding options to choose from, some may not be able to continue to pay out their high dividend yields over time.

One company I’m growing increasingly bearish on in this regard is Yellow Pages (TSX:Y).

Here’s why I think Yellow Pages could be a top dividend stock for investors to avoid right now.

Yellow caution tape attached to traffic cone

Source: Getty Images

Revenue decline spells trouble

I think the key catalyst that determines a lot of a company’s upside potential has to do with its underlying fundamentals and relative growth rates. Now, while Yellow Pages stock has surged of late (see chart above), that’s due to more exogenous factors than fundamental ones.

In terms of revenue growth from digital marketing and those fading print directories, things are pointing in the wrong direction. Indeed, digital revenues, which make up 80% of the company’s sales, dropped 6.8% in Q1 2025 alone, while print cratered 10.5%. Over the past five years, earnings per share have plunged 23% annually, with no reversal in sight.

Now, the company’s management team is talking a good game about “bending the revenue curve.” However, customer losses continue to persist, and legacy print is a dying relic. In a world of Google ads and AI-driven marketing, Yellow Pages is swimming upstream against giants. Any whiff of economic slowdown could accelerate the bleed, turning that yield into fool’s gold.

Dividend sustainability could be called into question

The other key driver of uncertainty moving forward is how Yellow Pages plans to fund its impressive dividend yield above 7%. In terms of the stock’s payout ratio, there’s a lot left to be desired in my books.

Last year, Yellow Pages shelled out 102% of profits as dividends. Any number over 100% is a screaming red flag for a lack of long-term dividend coverage. Now, free cash flows could improve (and the current distribution takes up around 50% of the company’s overall operating cash flow). But if margins deteriorate further over time, this stock is at serious risk of a dividend cut.

For those reasons, and expectations that earnings per share could drop another 23% in the year to come, this is a company with too many headwinds to be considered a viable investment in my view.

There are plenty of other mid-single-digit yielding stocks in the market to choose from with much more robust balance sheets. Thus, Yellow Pages looks like a textbook dividend trap, if I’ve ever seen one, right now.

Fool contributor Chris MacDonald has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Yellow Pages. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

Super sized rock trucks take a load of platinum rich rock into the crusher.
Dividend Stocks

3 TSX Stocks Built to Earn, Pay, and Endure

Three TSX stocks are compelling options for risk-averse investors prioritizing dividend safety and reliability over high yields.

Read more »

a woman sleeps with her eyes covered with a mask
Dividend Stocks

1 Ultra-Reliable Canadian Dividend Stock for Sleep-At-Night Investors

If money worries are keeping you up, this TSX dividend stock aims to do the opposite with recurring, bill-like revenue.

Read more »

The TFSA is a powerful savings vehicle for Canadians who are saving for retirement.
Dividend Stocks

The Fabulous May TFSA Stock With a 7% Monthly Payout

Supercharge your TFSA this May with PRO REIT (TSX:PRV.UN) – a 7% monthly yielder pivoting to industrial dominance for tax-free…

Read more »

Financial analyst reviews numbers and charts on a screen
Dividend Stocks

5 TSX Dividend Stocks I’d Buy If the TSX Pulls Back

These high-quality Canadian dividend stocks have rallied significantly, so waiting for a pullback may offer a better buying opportunity.

Read more »

a person prepares to fight by taping their knuckles
Dividend Stocks

Canadian Defensive Stocks to Buy Now for Stability

These stocks have raised their dividends annually for decades.

Read more »

Hourglass and stock price chart
Dividend Stocks

5 Canadian Stocks to Buy and Hold for the Next 5 Years

If you have the discipline and patience to navigate short-term market noise, these five quality Canadian stocks could deliver outstanding…

Read more »

shoppers in an indoor mall
Dividend Stocks

How Investing $45,000 in This Dividend Stock Could Generate $248 a Month in Passive Income

This Canadian monthly-paying dividend stock is known for its durable dividend payment and attractive yield.

Read more »

Printing canadian dollar bills on a print machine
Dividend Stocks

Transform Your TFSA Into a Cash-Generating Machine With $10,000

Given their resilient business model, visible growth pipeline, and high yields, these two Canadian stocks can boost your passive income.

Read more »