National Poultry Stock Historical Dividends and Yields

National Poultry (AMM:NATP) pays a dividend yield of 0%. The 5-year dividend growth rate is 0%. National Poultry has been paying dividends since 2015.

Below is National Poultry's complete dividend history, ex-dividend dates, payout ratio trends, and dividend yield charts.

Dividend started since

 
2015

Years of Dividend History

 
11
0% (Trailing)
0% (Forward)

Dividend Yield

0
 

Dividend Payout Ratio

0%
 

Growth Rate (5-Year)

0%
 

Yield on Cost (5-Year)

0%
 

3-Year Share Buyback Ratio

* Special dividend is not included in the calculation of dividend per share and related fields

Dividend Growth


National Poultry Dividend History & Ex-Dividend Dates

Complete history of 2 dividend payments by National Poultry since 2015. Each row shows the ex-dividend date, amount per share, record date, pay date, and declaration date.

National Poultry (AMM:NATP) Dividend History
Ex-Dividend Date Amount Record Date Pay Date Declaration Date
2016-04-26 JOD 0.1 2016-04-25 0000-00-00 2016-04-11
2015-04-29 JOD 0.15 2015-04-28 0000-00-00 2015-04-20

Frequently Asked Questions: AMM:NATP Dividend

Does National Poultry (AMM:NATP) pay a dividend?

National Poultry (AMM:NATP) does not currently pay a regular dividend. Review the historical record above for any past dividend payments or capital return policies.

Why doesn't National Poultry pay a dividend?

Companies typically forgo dividends to reinvest earnings into growth, R&D, acquisitions, or share buybacks.

What are dividend-paying alternatives to National Poultry?

For dividend-paying alternatives in National Poultry's sector, view dividend stocks by industry on GuruFocus's dividend stock screener.

Dividend Yield History

This is the historical trailing annual dividend yield of National Poultry. Buying stocks at higher yield relative its historical values is usually more profitable.

Dividend Per Share History

This the dividend history of National Poultry

Dividend Payout Ratio

This is the historical payout ratio of National Poultry. If the dividend payout ratio is close to or higher than 1, dividends might not be sustainable.