| Rank | Ticker | Company | Market | Sector | Price | Div Yield | Payout | 5Y Div Growth | FCF Cover | Debt/EBITDA | ROE | Score | Status | Actions |
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Compare dividend-paying companies using a Bazin-inspired framework: strong recurring income, dividend sustainability, conservative payout, cash generation, debt safety and earnings resilience. This is an education tool only — not financial advice.
| Rank | Ticker | Company | Market | Sector | Price | Div Yield | Payout | 5Y Div Growth | FCF Cover | Debt/EBITDA | ROE | Score | Status | Actions |
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Bazin’s investing style is usually associated with buying strong dividend-paying companies when their dividend yield is attractive, while avoiding fragile businesses where yield is only high because the share price collapsed.
The classic Brazilian shorthand is often a minimum dividend yield hurdle, commonly around 6%, but the stronger practical version is: high recurring income only if the company can keep paying it.
Automatically penalise or exclude companies with dangerous income characteristics.
Use this as your Bazin block inside the Outback Investor Method.
A very high dividend yield can be a trap. Bazin-style screening should not pick the highest yield automatically. The better candidate is usually the one with a solid yield, conservative payout, recurring earnings and lower risk of dividend cuts.
Adjust the income framework. Must add close to 100%.
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