Hennessy Advisors Raises Dividend as Cash Outpaces Debt by Nearly 30%
- Hennessy Advisors raised its quarterly cash dividend to $0.15, the 15th consecutive increase, payable March 4, 2026.
- Cash minus gross debt rose to $31.7 million, about a 28–30% year‑over‑year improvement, supporting the dividend.
- Quarterly revenue, net income and AUM declined roughly 14%, 32% and 14% respectively for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2025.
Hennessy Raises Dividend as Cash Outpaces Debt
Dividend Hike Reflects Nearly 30% Rise in Cash Net of Debt
Hennessy Advisors is increasing its quarterly cash dividend to $0.15 per share, marking the firm’s 15th consecutive dividend raise and a 9% bump from the prior payout. The board declares the dividend payable on March 4, 2026 to shareholders of record on Feb. 18, 2026, tying the move directly to a stronger balance sheet rather than short‑term market performance.
Company management points to a material improvement in liquidity as the primary justification for the higher payout. Hennessy reports cash and cash equivalents net of gross debt of $31.7 million, an increase of roughly 28% year‑over‑year, which executives describe as nearly a 30% rise over the past twelve months. The firm frames the dividend adjustment as sustainable given that strengthened net cash provides flexibility across market cycles.
The board and senior management stress that the dividend increase complements, rather than constrains, strategic options. Hennessy emphasizes returning capital to shareholders while retaining capacity to invest in product development, distribution and operational improvements. The company presents the payout as part of a disciplined capital allocation policy anchored in measured liquidity and long‑term fund management economics.
Quarterly Results Show Revenue and AUM Declines
For the first fiscal quarter ended Dec. 31, 2025, Hennessy reports total revenue of $8.3 million, down about 14% from the comparable period a year earlier. Net income declines roughly 32% to $1.9 million and fully diluted earnings per share fall to $0.24, a decrease of approximately 33%. Average assets under management, the revenue base for the advisory business, total $4.2 billion, down about 14%, with total AUM at $4.1 billion showing a similar contraction.
Management Emphasises Long‑Term Discipline and Strategic Flexibility
Chairman and CEO Neil Hennessy characterizes 2025 as a “surprisingly strong” year for U.S. equities and expresses confidence in a potential soft landing for 2026 while flagging risks from inflation, trade tensions and interest rates. President and COO Teresa Nilsen highlights the stronger balance sheet and ongoing focus on operational efficiency, saying those factors enable the firm to both return capital and pursue growth opportunities across products and regions without compromising financial strength.