• April 11, 2024

Flush FTSE 100 giant Astrazeneca to give more back to shareholders with dividend hike

Flush FTSE 100 giant Astrazeneca to give more back to shareholders with dividend hike
AstraZeneca will increase its annual dividend for the year by $0.20 (16p) to $3.10 (£2.47) per share

Pharmaceutical giant Astrazeneca has upped its dividend, citing confidence in future performance.

The company, London’s second -largest listed entity, said today that it would increase its annual dividend for the year by $0.20 (16p) to $3.10 (£2.47) per share, a progression in line with company policy.

This, the company said, already takes into account other previously announced capital commitments.

Michel Demaré, Astrazeneca’s chairman, said: “The board is delighted to announce a seven per cent increase to the dividend, taking it to $3.10 per share.

“This uplift is in line with our progressive dividend policy, which remains unchanged, and reflects the continuing strength of Astrazeneca’s investment proposition for shareholders. “

The Cambridge-based, £165bn-strong behemoth is one of the shining stars of the UK market, with its stock up 78 per cent in the last five years.

Last year, the company reported a gross profit of more than $37.5bn (£29.9bn), up from $32bn (£25bn) in 2022. Its profit before tax was $6.8bn (£5.4bn), an increase from $2.5bn (£1.9bn).

But despite the gains, a cool £7.6bn was wiped off its market capitalisation when it reported its results in February, as the share price fell five per cent in early morning trading.

Astrazeneca even got a mention in the Chancellor’s Spring Budget speech last month, where he announced the firm’s intention to commit £650m to fund the growth of UK science and technology projects.

The pharmaceuticals giant will expand its footprint on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus and fund building a vaccine manufacturing hub in Speke in Liverpool.

More recently, the firm has been on a mission to expand its scientific expertise through mergers and acquisitions.

This has seen it spend a total of $3.5bn (£2.8bn) on the acquisitions of rare disease biotech firm Amolyt Pharma and Canada-based Fusion Pharmaceuticals.