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A strong recovery in dividends hasn't make up for the losses sustained since the financial crisis. The total amount of money that large U.S. companies are paying in dividends is still running about 13 percent below the peak in mid-2008. Some of the companies that have raised dividends aren't back to where they were before the recession. That is particularly true for banks and other financial services companies. Their dividend yield, which measures how much cash is being paid per share, runs around 1.41 percent today, far below the 3.32 percent yield in 2007. JPMorgan raised its annual dividend sharply, from 20 cents per share to $1 per share. That's still well below the $1.52 a share it paid in 2008. Citigroup will pay just 4 cents a year, the maximum federal regulators are allowing the bank to pay under the provisions of its bailout package. Citigroup had paid as much as $2.16 per share before the financial crisis. Bank of America Corp. wasn't given the OK by the Fed to raise its dividend, which is also just 4 cents per share. At its peak in 2008, the company paid annual dividends of $2.56 per share. "Companies are paying more dividends, but they are also taking it slow," Silverblatt says. "Dividends are far from being completely back."
[Associated
Press;
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