NYSE: WY
Basic Materials · Paper, Lumber & Forest Products
Market Cap
$17.42B
52w High
$27.75
52w Low
$21.16
P/E
43.91
Volume
723.91K
Outstanding Shares
721.04M
Price vs Fundamentals
The stock fell 12.4% over the last year. Revenue declined 2.44% over the trailing twelve months. Operating margin moved from 9.42% to 7.7%. Free cash flow grew 91.82% over the trailing twelve months.
The stock has moved lower with no clear directional signal from operating metrics. The operating data does not yet tell a clear story — the move may reflect sentiment, sector rotation, or macro factors rather than company-specific earnings power.
Operating margin currently stands at 7.7%. A decisive move in revenue — currently down 2.44% — would be the clearest signal to resolve the ambiguity.
Company profile
Established in 1900, Weyerhaeuser Company holds a prominent global position as one of the largest private proprietors of timberlands.
Valuation
Stock splits
Every 1 shares became 2
Every 2 shares became 3
Every 1 shares became 2
Profitability & growth
Analyst consensus
13
Buy
10
Hold
2
Sell
Analyst ratings tend to be lagging indicators. Use as one signal among many.
Earnings
Full quarter-by-quarter history of actuals vs estimates. Switch into compare mode to inspect one metric year-over-year.
Next report
Jul 23, 2026
Q3 FY26 · EPS est $0.10 · Revenue est $1.86B
View
Dividends
$0.84/shareQuarterlyAt RiskWY pays a dividend with a 3.48% dividend yield, growing at 10.49% annually, covered 0.1× by free cash flow.
Dividend Yield
3.48%
Annual Div / Share
$0.84
5yr CAGR
+10.49%
Doubles every ~6.9yr
Payout Ratio
152.39%
At Risk
Dividend Growth Rate
3yr CAGR
-27.12%
5yr CAGR
+10.49%
10yr CAGR
-3.5%
Dividend History
Annual dividends paid per share
Income Projection
Today
$3/mo
In 5 yrs
$5/mo
In 10 yrs
$8/mo
| Today | In 5 yrs | In 10 yrs |
|---|---|---|
$35/yr $3/mo | $57/yr+65% $5/mo | $94/yr+171% $8/mo |
Yield-on-cost grows from 3.48% → 9.43% over 10yr
Analysis
Strong dividend growth rate
The 5-year CAGR of 10.49% meaningfully outpaces inflation, compounding real income growth for long-term holders.
High payout ratio
With 152.39% of earnings paid as dividends, there is limited retained earnings for reinvestment — and a dividend cut becomes more likely if earnings decline.
Dividend exceeds free cash flow
Free cash flow covers only 0.15× the dividend. The company is paying out more than it generates in cash, which is unsustainable without borrowing or asset sales.