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Dividend investors have seen reliable income streams come under pressure recently as inflation, soft demand and balance-sheet stress make tough choices even at established payout producers. In 2024 alone, three former dividend kings – Walgreens Boots Alliance, Leggett and Platt (NYSE: LEG), And 3M (NYSE:MMM) cut their dividend.
Walgreens later accepted a buyout from a private-equity firm. Sycamore Partners – completed last August – and now Leggett & Platt has made a similar move: It has today agreed to the acquisition Somnigroup International (NYSE:SGI) In an all-stock transaction worth $2.5 billion. The deal, announced this morning, lets Leggett shareholders trade their shares for 0.1455 shares of SomniGroup stock and take approximately 9% of the combined company.
What separates the dividend kings from the pack
A Dividend King earns his crown by increasing his annual payout for at least 50 consecutive years. The bar is high because it demands stable cash flow, disciplined capital allocation and a board committed to shareholders year after year. Leggett & Platt retained that title through 2024 with an increase of 52 consecutive years. That sequence indicated a company that consistently generated enough free cash to reward owners without overspending.
However, simply put the crown is No guarantee of stability. Higher yields may mask trouble when earnings are weak. Leggett’s payout ratio had climbed above 128% heading into its cut, and as cash generation lags, the Kings will also have to choose between preserving the dividend or protecting the balance sheet. Investors learned this the hard way in 2024 when three longtime lenders cut payouts to free up capital.
Why did Leggett & Platt cut its dividend?
Almost exactly two years ago, Leggett & Platt reported first-quarter sales of $1.1 billion, down 10% year-over-year, with adjusted EPS falling from $0.39 to $0.23. The board reacted by reducing the quarterly dividend for the second quarter of 2024 by 89% – from $0.46 to $0.05 per share (where it is today). The full-year 2024 dividend fell to $0.61 per share from $1.82 last year, as management directed savings toward deleveraging; Net debt was 3.61 times adjusted EBITDA at that time.
That decision reflected the challenges at Walgreens Boots Alliance and 3M, where similar margin erosion and debt loads forced the cuts. Leggett’s 2024 business sales total $4.384 billion, down from $4.725 billion in 2023. Bedding and furniture components – the heart of its business – faced weak demand. However, the cut frees up approximately $110 million annually that was earmarked for dividends, helping reduce net leverage to 2.4x adjusted EBITDA by December 31, 2025.
Somnigroup Buyout: Strategic Fit with Real Upside
Today’s agreement connects Leggett & Platt with its largest client. SomniGroup, the world’s leading bedding company formed by Tempur Sealy International’s purchase of the mattress firm, purchased Leggett on April 10 in an all-stock deal valued at $2.5 billion based on SomniGroup’s closing price. Shareholders receive 0.1455 SomniGroup shares per Legate share on a tax-deferred basis. The combined entity has projected net sales of $11.2 billion, adjusted EBITDA of $1.7 billion and operating cash flow of $1.1 billion in 2025.
SomniGroup expects $50 million in annual run-rate cost synergy from sourcing, operations and product innovation – $10 million in the first year – to be fully realized within three years. Leggett & Platt will operate as a separate business unit, preserving its 140-year track record of innovation while achieving vertical-integration benefits. Somnigroup’s stake in Leggett’s 2025 sale was already 7%.
key takeaway
Dividend kings get respect, but 2024 proved that title alone doesn’t protect payouts or stock prices. Leggett & Platt’s 89% cut and today’s purchase shows how quickly conditions can change. However, shareholders now benefit from exposure to a large, vertically integrated player with strong cash flow and $50 million of identified synergies. The deal will close by the end of 2026.
Regardless of how you look at it, the clearest lesson is this: diversify income sources and keep a close eye on the payout ratio. The king may lose his crown, but smart investors can still turn change into an opportunity.
